Download - Semblance and Event: Activist Philosophy and the Occurrent Arts (Technologies of Lived Abstraction)
Semblance and Event
Technologies of Lived Abstraction
Brian Massumi and Erin Manning, editors
Relationscapes: Movement, Art, Philosophy , Erin Manning, 2009
Without Criteria: Kant, Whitehead, Deleuze, and Aesthetics , Steven Shaviro, 2009
Sonic Warfare: Sound, Affect, and the Ecology of Fear , Steve Goodman, 2009
Semblance and Event: Activist Philosophy and the Occurrent Arts, Brian Massumi,
2011
Semblance and Event
Activist Philosophy and the Occurrent Arts
The MIT Press
Cambridge, Massachusetts
London, England
Brian Massumi
© 2011 Massachusetts Institute of Technology
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form by any electronic or mechanical means (including photocopying, recording, or information storage and retrieval) without permission in writing from the publisher.
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This book was set in Stone Sans and Stone Serif by Toppan Best-set Premedia Limited. Printed and bound in the United States of America.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Massumi, Brian. Semblance and event : activist philosophy and the occurrent arts / Brian Massumi. p. cm. — (Technologies of lived abstraction) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-262-13491-0 (hardcover : alk. paper) 1. Experience. 2. Events (Philosophy) 3. Time in art. I. Title. II. Title: Activist philosophy and the occurrent arts. B105.E9M375 2011 144’.3 — dc22
2011003566
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
with Erin
life unlimited
Contents
Series Foreword ix
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction: Activist Philosophy and the Occurrent Arts 1
1 The Ether and Your Anger: Toward a Speculative Pragmatism 29
2 The Thinking-Feeling of What Happens: Putting the Radical Back in
Empiricism 39
3 The Diagram as Technique of Existence: Ovum of the Universe
Segmented 87
4 Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression: In Four Movements 105
First Movement: To Dance a Storm 105
Second Movement: Life Unlimited 127
Third Movement: The Paradox of Content 142
Fourth Movement: Composing the Political 154
Notes 181
References 193
Index 201
Series Foreword
“ What moves as a body, returns as the movement of thought. ”
Of subjectivity (in its nascent state)
Of the social (in its mutant state)
Of the environment (at the point it can be reinvented)
“ A process set up anywhere reverberates everywhere. ”
The Technologies of Lived Abstraction book series is dedicated to work of
transdisciplinary reach inquiring critically but especially creatively into
processes of subjective, social, and ethical-political emergence abroad in
the world today. Thought and body, abstract and concrete, local and
global, individual and collective: the works presented are not content to
rest with the habitual divisions. They explore how these facets come for-
matively, reverberatively together, if only to form the movement by which
they come again to differ.
Possible paradigms are many: autonomization, relation; emergence,
complexity, process; individuation, (auto)poiesis; direct perception, embod-
ied perception, perception-as-action; speculative pragmatism, speculative
realism, radical empiricism; mediation, virtualization; ecology of practices,
media ecology; technicity; micropolitics, biopolitics, ontopower. Yet there
will be a common aim: to catch new thought and action dawning, at a
creative crossing. Technologies of Lived Abstraction orients to the creativ-
ity at this crossing, in virtue of which life everywhere can be considered
germinally aesthetic, and the aesthetic anywhere already political.
“ Concepts must be experienced. They are lived. ”
— Erin Manning and Brian Massumi
Acknowledgments
It is diffi cult to express the extent to which a thinking and writing process
echoes with other voices, in concord, counterpoint, and at times happy
cacophony. It would be impossible to express my gratitude and indebted-
ness to all who have contributed, in their many welcome manners, to this
project ’ s taking shape. I wouldn ’ t know where to begin. The book ’ s roots
intertwine with the distant origins of the earlier Parables for the Virtual ,
nearly ten years its junior, itself in entangled gestation nearly as long before
that. Neither would I know how to end, so wreathed is this book ’ s comple-
tion in the germinating tendrils of an embarrassing number of concurrent
books in progress, most of which will doubtless die on the proliferating
branch. My thanks, fi rst of all, go to Erin Manning, for living day to day
with my inability to begin or end and for understanding — and helping me
to truly understand — the joy that can come with being always in that
proliferating middle. It is also due to her that my middling has become
endowed with a milieu. Her founding the SenseLab, and her generously
imaginative tending of its growth and transformations, has given me an
environment for thought-in-action whose contribution to my life and
work has been inestimable. Thank you, Erin, for the intensity of thought,
creative joy, and “ concern for the event ” you bring to everything you do,
and most of all to the life we share. My heartfelt thanks as well go to the
SenseLab ’ s participants, past and present, students, activists, artists and
professors, local and international, without whose own generous contribu-
tions of ideas and energy the SenseLab could never have borne fruit. A
collective thanks goes to the commenters and questioners I have encoun-
tered along the long and intertwining path — from the students I have had
in Canada, the United States, and Australia over the course of my peripa-
tetic teaching career, to participants in many a seminar and lecture in a
xii Acknowledgments
splay of locations. Your traces inhabit these pages. I would like to extend
individual thanks to those who have so generously taken the time to
provide me with their feedback on the drafts: Lone Bertelsen, Erik
Bordeleau, Christoph Brunner, Kenneth Dean, Didier Debaise, Sher Doruff,
Jonas Fritsch, Thomas Lamarre, Erin Manning, Arjen Mulder, Anna Munster,
Andrew Murphie, John Protevi, Felix Rebolledo, Steven Shaviro, Isabelle
Stengers, and the evaluators for the MIT Press. Finally, to my son Jesse:
thank you for not taking me seriously and keeping me on my toes.
Earlier versions of chapters 1, 2, and 3 appeared in the following
publications:
Chapter 1: The Pragmatist Imagination: Thinking about Things in the Making ,
ed. Joan Ockman (Princeton: Princeton Architectural Press, 2000), 160 – 167
(under the title “ The Ether and Your Anger: Towards a Pragmatics of the
Useless ” ).
Chapter 2: Infl exions: A Journal for Research-Creation , no. 1 (2008), available
at www.infl exions.org/volume_4/issues.html#i1. An earliera bridged
version appeared in Joke Brouwer and Arjen Muller, eds., Interact or Die!
(Rotterdam: V2/NAi, 2007), 70 – 97.
Chapter 3: Diagram Work , ed. Ben van Berkel and Caroline Bos, special issue
of ANY (Architecture New York), no. 23 (1998): 42 – 47.
An earlier version of portions of chapter 4, fi rst movement, appeared in
Joke Brouwer and Arjen Mulder, eds., Information Is Alive: Art and Theory
on Archiving and Retrieving Data (Rotterdam: NAi Publishers, 2003), 142 – 151
(under the title “ The Archive of Experience ” ).
This work was generously supported by a research grant from the Social
Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada.
Introduction: Activist Philosophy and the Occurrent Arts
Something ’ s doing (James 1996a, 161). That much we already know. Some-
thing ’ s happening. Try as we might to gain an observer ’ s remove, that ’ s
where we fi nd ourselves: in the midst of it. There ’ s happening doing. This
is where philosophical thinking must begin: immediately in the middle
(Deleuze and Guattari 1987, 21 – 23, 293).
What ’ s middling in all immediacy is “ an experience of activity ”
(James 1996a, 161). “ The fundamental concepts are activity and process ”
(Whitehead 1968, 140). “ Bare activity, as we may call it, means the bare
fact of event or change ” (James 1996a, 161).
In bare point of fact, that is where everything, not just philosophy,
begins. “ Activity and change ” are “ the matter of fact ” (Whitehead 1968,
146). “ ‘ Change taking place ’ is a unique content of experience ” (James
1996a, 161). The unique content of experience: “ the sense of activity is in
the broadest and vaguest way synonymous with life. . . . To be at all is to
be active. . . . We are only as we are active ” (James 1996a, 161 – 162). To
begin to think life, we must begin in the middle with an activist sense of
life at no remove: in the middling immediacy of its always “ going on ”
(James 1996a, 161). 1
Whitehead ’ s term for his own activist philosophy at no remove from
life ’ s immediacy is “ process philosophy. ” For Whitehead, activity, as event
or change synonymous with life, entails a further concept. “ The notion of
potentiality is fundamental for the understanding of existence, as soon as
the notion of process is admitted. . . . Immediacy is the realization of the
potentialities of the past, and is the storehouse of the potentialities of the
future ” (Whitehead 1968, 99 – 100; emphasis added). To be at all is to be
active in a “ production of novelty ” consisting in the “ transformation of
the potential into the actual ” (Whitehead 1968, 151). The “ principle of
2 Introduction
unrest ” from which an activist philosophy departs requires a concept of
potential qualifying process as the production of the new: in a word,
“ becoming ” (Whitehead 1978, 28).
“ ‘ Creativity ’ is the principle of novelty ” (Whitehead 1978, 21). To be at
all is to become, actively creative. “ Process for its intelligibility involves
the notion of a creative activity belonging to the very essence of the occa-
sion. ” The transformation of the potential into the actual is a “ process
of self-creation. ” “ Such transformation includes the immediacy of self-
enjoyment ” (Whitehead 1968, 151).
The simple gesture of starting again from the beginning — that is, in the
midst — has led to a rapid cascade of concepts. From something doing to
the bare fact of activity; from there to event and change; then on to poten-
tial and the production of the new; coming to process as becoming. Then,
a major twist. The straight run encounters turbulence: process as becoming
is not just creative activity, it turns out. It is self-creation . More than that,
the self-creation is “ enjoyed. ” The principle of unrest eddies into some-
thing we would be forgiven for suspecting is not unlike an aesthetic appre-
ciation: an enjoyment of creativity. How is this “ at no remove ” ? How is
this immediate? Doesn ’ t it imply self-refl ection? Doesn ’ t self-refl ection
imply the luxury of the contemplative distance on the world? Isn ’ t that
exactly what is excluded by the bare activist fact that we always fi nd our-
selves smack in the middle of its unrest? The paradox of an immediate
“ self-enjoyment ” of experience, “ belonging to the very essence ” of its every
occasion, is the complicating knot around which this approach to philoso-
phy ties its concepts. It inscribes a certain duplicity into the very heart of
its thinking and of the world. 2
The duplicity is in fact an artifact of the immediacy. It is simply that each
occasion of experience comes into itself amid activities that are not its own,
already going on. The coming event takes a dose of the world ’ s surrounding
“ general activity ” and selectively channels it into its own “ special activity ”
(Whitehead 1967a, 176). Its special activity is its occurring in the singular
way that it does, toward the novel change in which it will culminate. There
is an inaugural moment of indecision between the already-going-on-around
and the taking-in-to-new-effect, before the culmination of this occurrence
has sorted out just what occasion it will have been. This “ primary phase ” of
the occasion of experience is the middling moment of bare activity with
which process philosophy is pivotally concerned. Bare activity : the just-
Introduction 3
beginning-to-stir of the event coming into its newness out of the soon to
be prior background activity it will have left creatively behind. The just-
beginning is on the cusp of the “ more ” of the general activity of the world-
ongoing turning into the singularity of the coming event. Every event is
singular. It has an arc that carries it through its phases to a culmination all
its own: a dynamic unity no other event can have in just this way. The unity
of the occasion is the just-this-way in which the phases of the arced unfold-
ing hold together as belonging to the same event.
All this is felt. Both the coming-into-its-own out of a prior moreness of
the world ’ s general always-going-on, and the unity of the holding-together
of phases arcing to a culmination in just this singular way, are felt. The
general feeling of the world ’ s more-than of activity going on, and the
singular feeling of that activity specifi cally coming to this, just so, are
immediate dimensions of experience ’ s occurring. They are dual immedia-
cies of process.
The fi rst dimension — the experience ’ s just-beginning-to-stir in a more-
than of its own coming activity — is the relational dimension of the event ’ s
occurring. It is the event under the aspect of its immediate participation
in a world of activity larger than its own. This bare activity of coming
experience fi nding itself in the midst must, in some sense of the word, be
perceived. Otherwise it would effectively come to nothing. To be a some-
thing-doing effectively is to be felt: to register (if only in effect ). In what
way bare activity is effective and felt, even though it lies at the very thresh-
old of experience just coming into itself, is a major question which runs
throughout this book. It is a question worrying every discussion, even
where the term bare activity is not itself brought out. Everywhere it is
already there, where it always is: at the cusp.
The second dimension — the experience coming out of bare activity into
itself just so — is the qualitative dimension of the event ’ s occurring: its thus-
ness. This registers as the event ’ s immediate enjoyment of the specialness
of its holding itself together in just the way it comes to do. This cannot
but be felt. Each phase of the event must in some way perceive the perti-
nence of the phase before it, in order to gather the prior phase ’ s momen-
tum into its own unfolding. Even as it does this, it is already anticipating
a subsequent phase, to which it will in turn relay the momentum of the
event ’ s occurrence. The phases of occurrence overlap as they relay each
other following an arc of felt becoming. In the overlap and relay, they
4 Introduction
co-perceive their mutual inclusion in the same event. They co-feel their
belonging to each other in co-occurrence. If this were not the case, their
multiplicity would not make “ an ” event. The event would not hold
together as one. It would lack dynamic unity. It would dissipate before it
could singularly culminate.
The qualitative dimension of the event is the how it happens, co-felt,
in the immediacy of its now unfolding. How-now. The qualitative how-now
of the event is the feeling it has of participating in itself. It is the feeling
of its unfolding self-relation . If this “ self-enjoyment ” by the event of its
own becoming is a form of refl ection, it is not only at no remove from the
event; it is an essential factor in its occurrence. It is because an event
“ enjoys ” itself in this arcingly immediate way that it is able to follow
through with itself. And it is because it follows through with itself that it
qualifi es as self-creative.
The duplicity with which Whitehead ’ s process philosophy is pivotally
concerned is this constitutive doubling of the event into co-occurrent
relational and qualitative dimensions. William James ’ s own brand of activ-
ist philosophy — “ radical empiricism ” — is struck by the same duplicity. The
basic tenet of radical empiricism is that everything that is experienced is
real in some way and that everything real is in some way experienced. If
“ change taking place ” is really the basic matter of fact of the world, then
the radical empiricist must hold that “ change itself is . . . immediately
experienced ” (James 1996a, 48). James discusses the experience of change
in terms of relation. Disjunctive relations involve an experience actively
“ passing out ” of the initial “ quasi-chaos ” to take a direction of its own,
“ terminating ” its movement in a way all its own, to its own separate effect
(James 1996a, 63). Disjunction is separative transition, across a threshold
of becoming. Conjunctive relation is transitional continuity of becoming
(62). Conjunctive relation is how the before and after of a threshold passed
mutually include each other in the same event, as “ pulses ” of the same
change. Conjunctive and disjunctive relations both concern change. For
radical empiricism, they are both real and immediately experienced.
Disjunctive relations are felt as a self-distancing coming out of an initial
condition of participation in the quasi-chaotic something-doing that is the
general condition of activity in the world. Conjunctive relations are felt as
a “ tendency ” or “ striving ” (166 – 167) that continues across thresholds often
marked by resistances and obstacles. “ The word ‘ activity ’ has no imaginable
Introduction 5
content whatever save these experiences of process, obstruction, striving,
strain, or release. ” These are “ ultimate qualia ” (James 1996a, 166 – 167). It is
artifi cial to oppose disjunctive relations to conjunctive relations. How could
each occasion of experience not involve both: a disjunctive coming-out of
prior participation, and a quality of continuing-across enabled by that sepa-
ration? Strains, obstructions, and resistances mark the continued formative
pressure of the quasi-chaotic manyness of the oceanic somethings-doings
all around on the singular “ drop ” of experience in the self-creating (James
1996b, 231 – 232). Ingressions of bare-active relation pulse the event, modu-
lating its onward phasing. Every event is a qualitative-relational economy of
process, “ full of both oneness and manyness ” (James 1996a, 93 – 94):
The continuities and the discontinuities are absolutely co-ordinate matters of imme-
diate feeling. The conjunctions are as primordial elements of “ fact ” as are the dis-
tinctions and disjunctions. In the same act by which I feel that this passing minute
is a new pulse of my life, I feel that the old life continues into it, and the feeling of
continuance in no wise jars upon the simultaneous feeling of a novelty. They, too,
compenetrate harmoniously. (95)
The relational-qualitative duplicity at the heart of activist philosophy is
a differential , not a dichotomy. It concerns coincident differences in manner
of activity between which things happen. The coming-together of the dif-
ferences as such — with no equalization or erasure of their differential —
constitutes a formative force. It is this force that provides the impulse that
the coming experience takes into its occurrence and appropriates as its
own tendency. Although the activity differentials are never erased, they do
“ compenetrate ” to “ harmonious ” result. Between them, they co-compose
a singular effect of unity resulting from how it is that they come differently
together. An integral of action and experience — a dynamic unity of self-
enjoying occurrence — emerges from the energetic playing out of their
impulsive difference.
Rather than a dichotomy, the relational-qualitative duplicity in the
midst of which activist philosophy begins is a principle of co-composition
between coincident manners of occurring. As a principle it is specifi cally
designed to disable the traditional dichotomies haunting Western philoso-
phy. The differential involved cannot, for example, be overlaid on the
subject-object dichotomy. The duplicity concerns activity and the poten-
tial for the appearance of novelty astir in it. Neither potential nor activity
is object-like. They are more energetic than object-like (provided that no
6 Introduction
presuppositions are made as to the physicality of “ energy ” or the modes
of causality involved in the energizing of events). For the basic category
they suggest is just that: occurrence. Neither object nor subject: event.
Activist philosophy ’ s emphasis on the occurrent makes it a fundamen-
tally nonobject philosophy . Deleuze enters the fold of activist philosophy
when he says that “ the event of alteration ” is “ one with the essence or the
substance of a thing ” (Deleuze 1988b, 32). This is another way of saying
there is no essence or substance to things other than the novelty of their
occurrence. “ I have, it ’ s true, spent a lot of time writing about this notion
of event: you see, I don ’ t believe in things ” (Deleuze 1995, 160). He believes
in the world — as process (Deleuze and Guattari 1983, 2 – 5; Deleuze and
Guattari 1987, 20). Whitehead is on much the same page: “ a well-marked
object is not an inherent necessity for an event. Wherever and whenever
something is going on, there is an event ” (Whitehead 1964, 78). Nature
itself, the world of process, “ is a complex of passing events ” (Whitehead
1964, 166). The world is not an aggregate of objects. To see it that way is
to have participated in an abstraction reductive of the complexity of nature
as passage (Whitehead 1964, 74 – 98). To “ not believe in things ” is to believe
that objects are derivatives of process and that their emergence is the
passing result of specifi c modes of abstractive activity. This means that
objects ’ reality does not exhaust the range of the real. The reality of the
world exceeds that of objects, for the simple reason that where objects are,
there has also been their becoming. And where becoming has been, there
is already more to come. The being of an object is an abstraction from its
becoming. The world is not a grab-bag of things. It ’ s an always-in-germ.
To perceive the world in an object frame is to neglect the wider range of
its germinal reality.
Activist philosophy is not a subjectivist philosophy either. It does not
presuppose a subject, only “ something ” going on. Beginning with event-
activity rather than the status of the subject makes activist philosophy a
fundamentally noncognitive philosophy . Rather than asking what ’ s doing,
cognitivist approaches ask what the subject can know of the world, as if
the subject does not come to itself already in the midst but rather looked
upon the world at a refl ective remove that it is philosophy ’ s job to over-
come. The cognitivist paradigm equates the subject with the knower, and
the object with the known. Whitehead remarks that to begin there is to
get off to a false start (Whitehead 1967a, 175). As James vigorously argues,
Introduction 7
if you start by presupposing a subject-object divide, there is no way of
preventing the separation from deepening into an abyss. How can the
subject cross the divide to reattach itself to the objectivity “ out there ” on
the other side? Doubt takes over. What if there is no other side? What if
it ’ s all illusion? Descartes curls up into the safety of his stove, coming out
only when his God is ready to vouchsafe a connection to reality for him
(Descartes 1996, xxii). Less divinely baked philosophies invent ingenious
ways of tightrope walking the abyss, or go through contortions to deny it
is there. For James, these amount to so much acrobatics. An essential divide
is presupposed the moment the categories of knower and known are over-
laid upon the subject and the object, and no amount of subsequent maneu-
vering, however ingeniously contortionist, will smooth it over. The problem
is that any way you twist it, the knowing is still in the subject and the
known is still right where it was on the other side. What can guarantee
that they correlate to each other? With all certainty, says James, nothing.
Any purported solution is smoke and mirrors. Cognitivist philosophies
may purport to walk a graceful line between the subject and the object,
but what they really do is take a run at making a “ self-transcending ” magic
leap across the chasm (James 1996a, 52). They are “ saltatory ” : desparate
attempts to magically jump an abyss of their own assuming. Or failing that
to make it disappear with a fl ourish of the metaphysical wand (James 1978,
233, 245 – 246).
From the perspective of activist philosophy, philosophy should not
overcome the cognitivist problem. The best approach is: don ’ t go there.
Not going cognitive requires only a slight displacement, James explains.
Consider the subjective and the objective as ways in which portions of
experience — pulses of process — relate to each other (James 1996a, 196).
What cognitivist philosophy grapples with as an essential divide, activist
philosophy sees as “ successive takings ” by experience, in experience, of
itself (James 1996a, 105). Here there can be no fundamental doubt.
Doubt as hard as you can, and all you have done is emphatically illustrate
one of the ways experience is wont to take itself back up into itself, self-
formatively. You have found yourself in doubt — no doubt a real event.
Doubt took effect. A doubter you just effectively became. Activist philoso-
phy is thoroughly realist. It affi rms the reality of any and all takings-effect.
Its question is not whether something is real or not. It is not out to dis-
qualify, or eliminate. Rather, it asks what aspects of process an event ’ s
8 Introduction
taking-effect exemplifi es. This effective realism even applies to the subject
and object distinction, the conventional formulations of which it is so
wary.
Activist philosophy does not deny that there is a duplicity in process
between subjective and objective. It accepts the reality of both. Rather than
denying them, activist philosophy affi rms them otherwise, reinterpreting
them in terms of events and their taking-effect. Specifi cally, it understands
them in terms of the relaying between events, in their “ successive takings. ”
This makes the problem of the subjective and the objective fundamentally
a question of time, as implicating a multiplicity of events. Grappling with
the problem of the subject and object becomes a way of developing activist
philosophy ’ s take on multiplicity and time, a concept whose centrality is
implicit from the start in activist philosophy ’ s emphasis on change.
The way that activist philosophy affi rms the subjective and objective as
aspects of the process of change is to say that process exhibits a formative
duplicity. This links the defi nition of objective and subjective to the rela-
tional-qualitative duplicity discussed earlier as co-composing dimensions
of process. The distinction between separative/disjunctive and conjunc-
tive/continuing aspects of process was another take on that duplicity of
process, providing another angle of attack on the same problem. The
subject/object distinction is yet another take on it.
Whitehead defi nes objectivity in terms of activity that has been left over
in the world by previous events of change and that can be taken up by a
next event for taking-in to its self-creation. The object is the “ datum ” in
the etymological sense. It is the “ given ” : that which is actively found
already in the world, to be taken for formative potential. The “ subject ” is
what fi nds itself in the midst of these processual leavings, taking them up
as the world ’ s gift of potential for its own taking-form. The “ subjective ” is
not something preexisting to which an event occurs: it is the self-occurring
form of the event. The dynamic unity of an occasion of experience is its
“ subjective form. ” Actually, there is no “ the ” subject. There is no subject
separate from the event. There is only the event as subject to its occurring
to itself. The event itself is a subjective self-creation: the how-now of this
singular self-enjoyment of change taking place. (For all these points, see
Whitehead 1967a, 175 – 190, and 1978, 41, 52.)
This way of defi ning the objective and the subjective dimensions of the
world of process places the objective at the cusp of the occasioning relation
Introduction 9
of participation. The objectivity of an experience is that quantum of the
surrounding activity that the coming occasion of experience selectively
takes up into itself as it separates off to phase into the occasion of its own
becoming. The object as such does not preexist this relay between occa-
sions any more than the coming subject preexists its fi nding-itself-in-the-
midst. It is taken for an object by the next occasion ’ s becoming. Given
potential is objectively determined by how it is effectively taken up, as a
relay experience feels its way into its occurrence. The objective belongs to
the immediate past of just this occasion. But it just as immediately belongs
to that occasion ’ s proximate future. The coming occasion ’ s passing will
bequeath the potential-grabbing change its own activity has created to
successor experiences, for their self-creative taking. The subjective is the
passing present, understood not as a point in metric time but rather as a
qualitative duration — a dynamic mutual inclusion of phases of process in
each other, composing a “ span ” of becoming (this is James ’ s “ specious
present ” ) (Whitehead 1968, 89; on the durational span of an occasion,
Whitehead 1978, 125 and James 1996a, 131; on the immediate past and
the immediate future, Whitehead 1967a, 191 – 200).
This defi nition of the subjective and objective lays the groundwork for
the processual defi nition of the knower and the known, but it does not
map directly onto it. Technically speaking, for activist philosophy, the end
of the experience knows its beginning (James 1996a, 57). All that a self-
creating occasion of experience ultimately “ knows ” of the world ’ s activity
is how it has taken up a portion of it into its own becoming. “ What ” this
will have been exactly retains a certain indeterminacy as long as the
becoming is still in process. The “ what ” of an experience is only fully defi -
nite at its culmination. The knower, according to James, is the end of the
experience ’ s becoming. What it “ knows ” is its own beginning, retroac-
tively. An experience determinately knows what it ’ s been only as it peaks —
which is also the instant of its “ perishing ” (Whitehead 1978, 29; Whitehead
1967a, 177). The only subject there is in the completed sense is a “ super-
ject ” : the “ fi nal characterization of the unity of feeling ” at an experience ’ s
peaking (Whitehead 1978, 166). The “ creative advance into novelty ” runs
from the objective vagueness of a quasi-chaos of activity already going on,
to a terminal defi niteness of an experience subjectively “ satisfying ” its
enjoyment of itself in a fi nal fulfi llment knowingly felt (on vagueness, see
Whitehead 1968, 109).
10 Introduction
Pure : The word will return throughout this book in a refrain, doubtless
to the discomfort of many a reader schooled in the critique of its conven-
tional associations of moral superiority, particularly as regards race. It is
used here in an unconventional sense, borrowed from James. “ Pure ” is
James ’ s qualifi er for the bare-active fi rst fl ush of emergent experience. The
just-emerging of experience is pure in the very specifi c sense that it is
“ virtually both subjective and objective ” (James 1996a, 130). The general
going-on of activity in the world has yet to sort itself out as what the special
activity already brewing will determinately become. The dynamic unity of
the coming event is still a work in progress. Since that forming dynamic
unity will defi ne the subjective form of the experience, what the subject
will be is still an open question. As long as the subject lacks fi nal defi ni-
tion, what its objects will have been in the end is also indeterminate. As
is its objective bequest to subsequent experience. What is “ given ” is what
will prove in the end to have been taken in. In the end, it is what will
have passed on, potentially to be taken-in again. Pure in this context does
not imply a hierarchy of value. It draws a question mark. It designates the
open question of what experience ’ s self-creative activity will yield in the
dynamic pulse of its process. Pure here is not an eliminative concept either.
It marks the processual co-presence of a self-creating subject of experience
with what will prove to have been its objects, together in the making.
“ Pure ” experience is not in the least reduced or impoverished. It is overfull.
It is brimming “ virtually or potentially ” (23). It is the embarrassment of
processual riches in which every experience fi nds itself in its incipiency.
“ It is a that which is not yet any defi nite what , tho ’ ready to be all sorts of
whats ” (93). Whitehead ’ s term for it is “ pure feeling. ” Philosophy, for him,
is nothing less than a “ critique of pure feeling ” (Whitehead 1978, 113). In
the pages that follow, whenever the word pure is used, the reader should
think of the displacement that activist philosophy effects in relation to the
notions of subject and object and the paradigms of cognition within which
they are normally embedded. The crucial point is that it does this out of
respect for the richness of experience in the making. In this connection,
it is especially important not to equate “ pure ” experience with “ raw ”
experience.
“ Raw ” experience carries connotations of a state of precultural grace
unsullied by language. A “ prelinguistic ” Eden uncomplicated by learning
Introduction 11
and the “ higher ” cognitive functions it inculcates. This is not at all the
concept here. The concept is rather that all “ higher ” cognitive functions
come back through the middle. They are only active to the extent that
they reactivate in the quasi-chaotic midst of something doing again. They
come back through, bare-actively, in all immediacy, as recreative factors of
experience rearising. They are “ judgments ” that come in all immediacy as
direct perceptions . They concern, for example, causal relation, similarity,
categorizations, qualitative evaluations, linguistic associations, and even
symbolic fi gurings. Peirce calls them “ perceptual judgments, ” admitting
that it is something of a misnomer because they occur without a separate
act of judgment (Peirce 1997, 93 – 94, 242 – 247). They come, he says, “ as if ”
there had been a judgment but too immediately for one to have actually
been performed. They are judgments without the actual judgment: direct
perceptions of the world ’ s acquired complexity, incoming, fl ush with the
bare-active fi rstness of experience feeling its way into a next event. This
“ feedback of higher forms ” back into and through pure experience is
summed up in the formula practice becomes perception (Massumi 2002, 30,
189 – 190, 198 – 199, 293n17; see also Massumi 2010a on “ priming ” ).
Chapters 2 and 4 of this book deal extensively with this factor of pure
experience, analyzed under the term thinking-feeling.
The displacement from cognition, with its Cartesian stovepipe dream
of foundational clearness and distinctness, to the messy middling goings-
on of pure experience in all its potential and complexity, has far-reaching
pragmatic consequences. This is because the cognitive subject-object
dichotomy itself has far-reaching consequences. It extends itself into a
division between ways of knowing, and from there into a hierarchy between
modes of practice. This is especially evident in the division between disci-
plines of knowledge that are in a position to make a claim to “ objectivity ”
and those that are not. The traditional form this bifurcation of knowledge
practices takes is the chasm between the “ two cultures, ” scientifi c and
humanistic. The same division recurs within the disciplines on each side
of that massive divide, between empirical methods (in a decidedly nonradi-
cal sense) and speculative or theoretical approaches (dismissed by the other
side as “ merely ” subjective). This divide repeats as a distinction between
modes of practices, even practices that do not defi ne themselves primarily
as knowledge practices, such as political practices. Here, the dichotomy
12 Introduction
recurs as an opposition between “ fact-based ” or “ commonsense ” approaches
and “ experimental, ” “ idealistic, ” or “ utopian ” approaches, with a clear
implication of the superiority of the former.
Activist philosophy refuses to recognize these divisions as fundamental,
or to accept the hierarchy they propagate. Its own fundamental duplicity,
that of the relational/participative and the qualitative/creatively-self-enjoy-
ing, suggests a different schema. The relational/participatory aspect of
process could fairly be called political , and the qualitative/creatively-self-
enjoying aspect aesthetic . These aspects are not treated as in contradiction
or opposition, but as co-occurring dimensions of every event ’ s relaying of
formative potential. They do not parse out in a way that maps onto the
existing disciplinary landscape and the associated ways of conventionally
bifurcating practices. We saw earlier how the disjunctive/separative and
conjunctive/continuing aspects of process played through this duplicity.
Another spinoff distinction playing through it for activist philosophy is
between the pragmatic and the speculative . Instead of denoting a parting of
the ways, however, this distinction is used to express their coming together.
Hyphens are in order: aesthetico-political , speculative-pragmatic .
The speculative aspect relates to the character of potential native to the
world ’ s activity, as expressed eventfully in the taking place of change. The
pragmatic aspect has to do with how, in the taking-defi nite-shape of poten-
tial in a singular becoming, the relational and qualitative poles co-compose
as formative forces. Pragmatic doesn ’ t mean practical as opposed to specula-
tive or theoretical. It is a synonym for composition: “ how ” processual
differentials eventfully play out as co-composing formative forces. This
pragmatic playing out is always speculative in the sense that what will
come of the process is to some degree an open question until its “ fi nal
characterization ” of itself at its point of culmination. En route, it is specu-
latively anticipating what it will have been. That speculation is entirely
active. It is the “ how ” of the experience getting where it ’ s ultimately going
with itself. The co-composing of formative forces constitutes in each exer-
cise of experience a novel power of existence : a power to become.
By this thinking, the discipline called art does not have a monopoly on
creative composition. And the domain called politics does not have a
monopoly on real existential change. There is no less an aesthetic side to
politics than there is a political side to art. Practices we call doing politics
and practices we call doing art are all integrally aesthetico-political, and
Introduction 13
every aesthetico-political activity is integrally speculative-pragmatic. Every
mode of practice, however its domain is conventionally classed, is aes-
thetico-political/speculative-pragmatic, each in its own inimitable way.
It is here that the constructive questioning begins. It consists in fi nding
ways to understand any given mode of activity in these experiential terms,
starting from an ontological primacy of the relational-qualitative and
respecting the singularity of the activity ’ s unfolding — although the word
“ ontological ” no longer fi ts. Process is only perishingly about being. But
it is everywhere and always about powers of existence in becoming. The
concerns of activist philosophy are ontogenetic more than ontological
(Simondon 2005, 24 – 26 and passim).
The speculative-pragmatic cast of activist philosophy gives it an in-built
affi nity with one conventional classifi cation of practices, those sharing its
name: “ activism. ” Activist philosophy, as it is explored in this book,
addresses itself as much to activisms in the familiar sense, in any domain
in which they stir, as it does to art or philosophical practices in their exist-
ing disciplinary frames. The affi nity is especially close with activist prac-
tices that see themselves as simultaneously cultural and political, as these
are already grappling in their own way with the aesthetic-political/specu-
lative-pragmatic polarities. This book in large part works from practices
that according to traditional classifying schemes would fall into the domain
of art or philosophy. But it does this to open art and philosophy to each
other, and in a way that opens their opening onto to each other out into
a wider activist understanding of the relational-qualitative processes
moving through them. The ultimate speculative-pragmatic wager of the
book is that if this opening-out succeeds, subsequent takings-up of its
tendency might open out of its own practice, that of writing, into other
activist arenas in the more usual sense of the word. If the book can be
considered to have one central concern, it is this: the politicality of process,
in whatever initial midst. The politicality of a pulse of process is the
manner of potential it passes on for self-creative successor effect.
With this in view, the book at certain points suggests concepts specifi -
cally addressing the taking-up of process. If one exercise of experience
bequeaths its activity in residual form for a successor ’ s taking up, might
not that taking up be anticipated, in a fostering way, by how the experi-
ence is determined to occur to itself? How can an occasion of experience
so determine itself as to leave traces of its activity apt to provide propitious
14 Introduction
conditions for the next exercise ’ s arcing toward the production of its own
novelty of successor self-enjoyment? How, from its just-beginnings in bare
activity, can an experience modulate its own self-formative tendency ’ s
going beyond itself, toward a potentializing of other events? Since foun-
dational clearness and distinctness are (fortunately for creativity) out of
the equation, it is a given that no event can lay down the law in a way
that essentially predefi nes its succession. But are there still ways in which
an experience can orient what comes? In what way can an event con-
structively include formative potential for what lies beyond in its own
constitution?
The question of how the beyond of an occasion ’ s self-enjoyment is effec-
tively included in its constitution is the question of importance so central to
Whitehead ’ s philosophy (Whitehead 1968, 1 – 19). The question of impor-
tance is also the question of expression , or what is effectively passed on by
an occasion ’ s passing (Whitehead 1968, 20 – 41). Importance and expression
are not add-ons to experience. They are not “ merely ” subjective. They are
what bridge the subjective and objective aspects of the world, in its rolling
effectively on. They are fundamental categories of the world ’ s becoming.
They are ontogenetic factors, constitutive of the politicality of process.
In what follows, the question of how the makeup of an occasion of
experience effectively and constructively includes its own beyond is
approached through the concept of techniques of existence . A technique of
existence is a technique that takes as its “ object ” process itself, as the
speculative-pragmatic production of oriented events of change. Techniques
of existence are dedicated to ontogenesis as such. They operate immedi-
ately qualitatively-relationally. They make no gesture of claiming “ objec-
tivity, ” nor do they pride themselves on their grasp of common sense. At
the same time, they reject being characterized as “ merely ” subjective. They
are inventive of subjective forms in the activist sense: dynamic unities of
events unfolding. So implicated are they with the politicality of event-
formation that they qualify whatever domain in which their creativity is
operative as an occurrent art.
The concept of the diagram is adopted from Peirce and Deleuze to think
about what techniques of existence do pragmatically-speculatively. Accord-
ing to both Peirce and Deleuze, what they do is abstract. Diagramming is
the procedure of abstraction when it is not concerned with reducing
the world to an aggregate of objects but, quite the opposite, when it is
Introduction 15
attending to their genesis. To abstract in this fuller sense is a technique of
extracting the relational-qualitative arc of one occasion of experience — its
subjective form — and systematically depositing it in the world for the next
occasion to fi nd, and to potentially take up into its own formation. The
subjective form of an experience is the dynamic form of how the potentials
for change initially found in the bare-active midst come to play out in its
occasion. In addition to the initial conditions of given potential, recharges
of potentials en route must also be factored in. These are chance intrusions:
resistances, obstacles, and enablements. The event of experience self-mod-
ulates under pressure from these infusions of activity. To follow itself
through to its culmination, the occasion under way must sense their
potential on the fl y, and creatively take it into its continued unfolding, as
added impetus to its becoming.
The diagram as technique of existence is a way of informing the next
occasion of these potentials for self-formation: “ The greatest point of art
consists in the introduction of suitable abstractions ” (Peirce 1997, 226). It
should not for a moment be forgotten that all of this concerns experience.
In experience is to be found the genesis of things . By abstraction, Peirce
writes, “ I mean such a transformation of our diagrams that characters of
one diagram may appear in another as things ” (ibid.). What we call objects,
considered in the ontogenetic fullness of process, are lived relations
between the subjective forms of occasions abstractly nesting themselves in
each other as passed-on potentials. They are the inter-given: the systematic
form in which potential is relayed from one experience to another. “ Objec-
tifi cation itself is abstraction ” (Whitehead 1985, 25).
The abstract is lived experience. I would almost say that once you have reached
lived experience, you reach the most fully living core of the abstract. . . . You can
live nothing but the abstract and nobody has lived anything else but the abstract.
(Deleuze 1978b)
This, then, is a book about technologies of lived abstraction .
Major issues will have to be left in suspense as this introduction com-
pletes its own short-lived arc. One is the concept of the virtual, much
maligned in some quarters today. The other is the issue of experience as it
applies to nonhuman forms of life — and even to matter itself.
The concept of the virtual is taken up at length in the course of the
book under the guise of semblance. Semblance is another way of saying
“ the experience of a virtual reality. ” Which is to say: “ the experiential
16 Introduction
reality of the virtual. ” The virtual is abstract event potential. Semblance is
the manner in which the virtual actually appears . It is the being of the
virtual as lived abstraction. As used here, “ semblance ” is free of the con-
notations of “ illusion ” in Adorno ’ s and Lacan ’ s uses of the term.
The virtual cannot be understood as a “ space ” of potential — it is, after
all, event potential. It cannot be treated as a realm apart without being
entirely denatured as a speculatively-pragmatically useful concept. It is in
no way an idealist concept. And it is in no way in opposition with actual-
ism. The activist philosophy advanced here is in a way a thoroughgoing
actualism, taking the term actual at its etymological word: “ in act . ” For
activist philosophy, everything real gets into the act, and everything in the
act is real according to its own mode of activity.
As taken up here, Deleuze ’ s “ virtual ” corresponds to Whitehead ’ s “ pure
potential. ” The activity of pure potential for Whitehead is to make “ ingress ”
into the occasion of experience, as an ontogenetic force collaborating in
the dynamic taking-determinate-form of the experience (the event ’ s “ con-
crescence ” ). The activity of potential making ingress is “ energizing ”
(Whitehead 1967a, 182 – 183). At ingress, the potential arcs through the
experience ’ s energized tending toward an aimed-at fulfi llment. The poten-
tial runs through the arc of the experience ’ s unfolding, infolded into it. It
infolds in the form of a tendential direction, or vector of self-formation.
At ingress, the potential is abstract in that it has yet fully to occur to the
experience ’ s actual tending. As an aim, or, as James would say, a terminus,
it is abstract again, because the moment of its fulfi llment is the instant
when all is processually said and done. The experience self-expires on
reaching it, so that it actually will have experienced its potential only as
an onward lure — a reaching-toward something that disappears between the
closing fi ngers of the experience even as they grasp it. But it does remain
a “ some thing ” : not entirely determinate to the end. It ’ s not over until it ’ s
over, and what is tended-toward can infl ect itself up until the fi nal instant.
Thus one of the roles of the concept of the virtual, or of pure potential, is
to make surprise a universal, constitutive force in the world ’ s becoming.
The universality of surprise as a constitutive force makes the process of
the “ actualization ” through which potential runs an existential drama.
Actualization, for Deleuze, is the existentializing “ dramatization ” of pure,
abstract potential (the virtual “ Idea ” ; Deleuze 2004a, 94 – 116).
The virtual is a limit-concept of process and experience. It comes
once aboriginally with ingressive initiative, and again at the end, with the
Introduction 17
perishing. It marks the outside limits of the in-act of process and dramati-
cally runs through it limit to limit. The virtual limits are conjointly felt in
the arcing of the experience toward the novelty of its taking fi nal effect.
The virtual is abstractly lived as the experience runs through itself, from
one limit of its unfolding to the other.
Sometimes at the culmination of the experience, the drama appears for
itself. It is seen . Not actually, if that means corresponding to a sense impres-
sion striking the body ’ s visual apparatus. Actually: as in in act . This appear-
ing of the drama of an experience ’ s self-enjoyment in the act is the
semblance. Say you catch sight of a mouse out of the corner of your eye.
You don ’ t so much see the mouse as you feel the arc of its movement with
your eyes. You feel the movement continuing out of the immediate past
when it was just outside your visual fi eld, coming in. If the movement is
felt to be toward you, the feeling of the immediate past includes the imme-
diate future of your movement taking off in the opposite direction. You
don ’ t actually “ see ” the vector of the mouse ’ s movement, or your own.
You immediately experience the dynamic unity of the event — mouse
incoming, you outgoing — phasing forward in the form of a felt line of
approach. This direct perception of the arc of an event gathering up its
immediate past and scurrying it forward toward an immediate postrodent
future is an example of a semblance. If the arc of the event is seen, it is
seen nonsensuously, as an abstract line (on nonsensuous perception, White-
head 1967a, 180 – 183; on abstract line, Deleuze and Guattari 1987, 9, 197,
280, 296, 496 – 498). It is seen as in an immediate abstraction in a specious
present of fear.
The feeling of seeing the abstract line of the event is a vision-effect. It
is an effect of the event-triggering tension inherent to the human-mouse
differential. It expresses that differential in an abstract perception of the
dynamic unity of the event, as you feel you saw it with your eyes, or
perhaps eyed it into feeling. In other words, the dynamic form of the event
is perceptually felt , not so much “ in ” vision as with vision or through vision:
as a vision-effect. It is a lived abstraction: an effective virtual vision of the
shape of the event, including in its arc the unseen dimensions of its imme-
diate past and immediate future. The lived abstraction of the event is an
amodal perception, in the nonsensuous shape of a line, of change taking
place. It is direct perception of an event. (Deleuze ’ s “ time-image ” is the
prime example in his work of the appearing of the virtual in what would
here be termed a semblance of an event; Deleuze 1989, 68 – 97 and passim).
18 Introduction
Amodal, nonsensuous: these are ways of saying that the effective percep-
tion of the shape of the event was not actually in any particular mode of
sensory perception. When a semblance is “ seen, ” it is virtually seen. How
else could the virtual actually appear — if not as virtual? Seeing a semblance
is having a virtual vision. It is a seeing-through to the virtual in an event
of lived abstraction.
There is a curious excess of experience in the event. Since the semblance
is amodal, in principle it could have been perceptually-felt in any mode.
This means that when it is seen, its appearing virtually in vision betokens
a potential variation on the experience as it could have appeared as an
other than visual sense-effect, for example as a sound-effect. If you think
about it, you probably “ actually ” heard more of the event than you saw,
since a perceptible but as yet unattended-to scurrying preceded the ani-
mal ’ s entering your visual fi eld. There is no reason why the continuing of
the event into the immediate future could not have appeared avowedly as
a sound-effect. In fact, for some people with a dominance of hearing, it
would have. Thus the problem of the virtual is indissociable from the ques-
tion of the abstract composition of the senses, in excess of their actual exer-
cise. It is primarily in this connection that the concept of the virtual
appears in this book: as a way of thinking about how techniques of exis-
tence, in co-composing powers of existence, recompose the senses; and in
recomposing the senses, catch an excess reality of the virtual in the act,
for diagrammatic relay toward new occasions of experience reinventing
how lived abstraction can be felt in our embodied animal life. The aes-
thetico-political production of novelty is the excess invention of experien-
tial forms of life .
The trick to the productive speculative-pragmatic use of the concept of
the virtual is never to separate it from the in-act. It takes a fair bit of con-
ceptual calisthenics to achieve this, but it ’ s well worth the exercise. The
key is always to hold to the virtual as a coincident dimension of every
event ’ s occurrence. Again: don ’ t take this as a dichotomy but as a creative
differential, one essentially ingredient to every experience to the extent
that every experience is an occasion of lived abstraction.
As a limit-concept, the virtual cannot be thought without paradox — and
without working to make the paradox conceptually productive. There are
a number of key junctures at which activist philosophy, like any metaphys-
ics, must affi rmatively make do with paradox. This is an essential moment
Introduction 19
in a philosophy ’ s self-formation. It is the moment a philosophical thought
process verges upon the limit of what it can think. To make that limit-
experience productive, the thinking must then turn back before it breaks
apart like a spaceship entering a black hole. It must inscribe that self-saving
infl ection in itself, in the form of new concepts or new variations on old
concepts. This must be done in a way that does not try to resolve or dismiss
the paradox. It is done by taking the paradox seriously as a limit, turning
back from it, and taking the necessity of turning back constructively to
heart. The limit-experience of paradox turns around into an impulse for
continuing the philosophy ’ s self-creative advance. It has been taken-in as
a self-modulation of the thinking-process. It is no longer worried over as
a logical contradiction. It has been actively converted into a creative factor
that is liminally immanent to the process. It has become a positive factor.
This affi rmation of noncontradiction as a self-formative necessity is an essen-
tial feature of a creative philosophy ’ s signature activity.
The paradox of the virtual — that it is never actual but always in some
way in-act — is closely associated with the paradox of immediate self-
refl ection entailed by the concept of self-enjoyment discussed earlier. The
semblance is the event refl ecting itself, directly and immediately, in lived
abstraction. There are other paradoxes to be grappled with as well. There
is, for example, a paradox of relation for activist philosophy.
Relationality was linked to the notion of the differential just alluded
to. It was said that an effect was sparked across differences. The differences
concern the mode of activity of what will have been the formative
factors of the coming experience ’ s occurring to itself. The effect comes
between the different factors. The experience takes off from them, as it
takes itself into its own event. The event shows itself, for the dynamic
unity it has come to be. It does not show the differentials from which it
has taken off into its own unfolding dynamic unity. But neither does
it efface them. It resolves them into its own appearance. They recede
into the fl ash of its occurrence. They are left behind by the event they
condition, which takes off from, so that they show only in that take-off
effect.
Take a fl ash of lightning. Its appearance is conditioned by an electro-
magnetic differential. The differential does not show. What shows is the
dynamic unity of the differential ’ s playing out. The fl ash comes of that
playing-out, but shows for itself. The effect lifts off from its conditions into
20 Introduction
its own appearance. It is an extra-effect: a dynamic unity that comes in
self-exhibiting excess over its differential conditions. In the immediacy of
its own event, the event of lightning is absolutely, self-enjoyingly absorbed
in the singularity of its own occurrence, and that ’ s what shows. All occa-
sions of experience exhibit this “ sheer individuality ” amid diversity
(Whitehead 1967a, 177). An event of experience is a “ little absolute ” of
occurrent self-enjoyment, conditioned yet self-creating (James 1996b, 280).
The event transpires between the differential elements that set the condi-
tions for it. The electromagnetic gradient fi eld that resolves itself into the
occurrence of lightning is a complex fi eld phenomenon. The fi eld enve-
lopes the distances between a multitude of elemental particles, bringing
them into an energizing tension. The fl ash is the eventful resolution of the
tension. It is how the fi eld shows, in excess to itself, as an extra-effect. The
exhibited extra-effect is an expression of that multitude of particles having
come together just so, enveloped in tension. The intensive envelopment
of the contributing elements constitutes a relational fi eld — but only for the
strike of this event. Had the lightning not occurred, it would have been
because the contributing factors had not come together in just this way.
The relation and the fl ash of eventful resolution are one. The fl ash is the
being of the relation (Simondon 2005, 63). Had the fl ash not occurred, the
relation would effectively not have been. It would not have resolved itself
into an effect. In activist philosophy to be is to be felt : to effectively register.
To be is to be in effect. To be is to get into the act, even though the act is
the whole show, and what the performance resolves to show recedes.
The paradox of relation can be summed in the term relation-of-nonrela-
tion . Elements contributing to an occurrence come into relation when they
come into effect, and they come into effect in excess over themselves. In
themselves, they are disparate. If they are in tension, it is precisely as a
function of the differential between their positions. It is as a function of
their distances from each other. The factors do not actually connect. Their
distance is enveloped in a fi eld effect that is one with the tension culmi-
nating in the strike of an event. The event effectively takes off from its
elements ’ contribution to it. As an extra-effect, it does not connect to them
as its “ cause. ” It comes into its own sheer individuality of occurrence: its
little-absoluteness. The phrase relation-of-nonrelation is a way of holding
together, in the concept of the event, the differential status of its condi-
tioning elements and the dynamic unity of their sheer occurrence as a little
Introduction 21
absolute. It is a synonym of “ conditioned by a disparate multitude and
individually-absolutely self-creative ” (on relation and disparateness see
Simondon 2005, 31, 34 – 35, 205 – 209).
The main point to be derived form this is that relation in activist philo-
sophical sense is not connective . The paradox of the relation-of-nonrelation
excludes what is commonly called interaction or interactivity from qualify-
ing as relational (see chapter 2). Extensive use of the concept of relation-
of-nonrelation is made at various points in this book (for example, in the
discussion of experiential “ fusion, ” also called synchresis, in chapters 2 and
4). There is also a related point about expression. Expression is always
extra-effective. The subject is the subjective form, or dynamic unity, of the
extra-effecting event. There is no subject prior to or outside the expression.
The being of the subject is the extra-being of the occurrent relation (it is
Whitehead ’ s superject; on extra-being, Deleuze 1990, 7).
If we apply this concept of the relation-of-nonrelation to what occurs
between occasions of experience, we are led to treat the experiences them-
selves as differentials. The consequence is that occasions of experience
cannot be said to actually connect to each other . They may be said to “ come
together ” only in the sense of being mutually enveloped in a more encom-
passing event of change-taking-place that expresses their differential in the
dynamic form of its own extra-being. That occasions of experience do not
actually connect is Whitehead ’ s doctrine of “ contemporary independence ”
(Whitehead 1967a, 195 – 196). It means that the relation between different
experiences is purely effective: on the creative level of effect. Their relation
is the creative playing out of a nonrelation effectively expressing the inex-
pungeable difference between the sheer individuality of events of experi-
ence, by virtue of which each is a little absolute. 3
This might sound lonely. It is certainly not touchy-feely. But Whitehead
affi rms it as a necessary condition for creativity. The nonrelation of relation
is what makes “ elbow room ” in the world for an experience to come abso-
lutely into its own production of novelty, uncramped by the constraint of
connectively fi tting in (Whitehead 1967a, 195). This preserves the emer-
gence of novelty, rather than conformity to the present, as the principle
of activity. It also makes all the world expressive. Purely self-expressive. It
means the world of change is made of self-creative expression. This has
obvious advantages for an aesthetico-political activist philosophy oriented
toward a creative autonomy of forms of life.
22 Introduction
A further consequence of these considerations is that different
occasions of experience relate only immanently : by their mutual participa-
tion in the world ’ s bare activity, in which they all fi nd themselves in their
incoming potential, and into which they perish as they peak. The quasi-
chaos of bare activity is immanent to each occasion in the sense that it
inaugurally in-forms them of what potentials are astir for their creative
taking-in. Bare activity wells up into the event ’ s self-forming. This leads to
another paradox, one concerning the notion of immanence. When an
occasion of experience perishes into the world of bare-active potential from
which it arose, it contributes its self-formative activity to the world, for
potential uptake into a next occasion ’ s unfolding. It transcends itself back
into the immanence out of which it came (Whitehead 1967a, 237; White-
head 1968, 167). It makes a bequest to process continuing beyond itself,
in the form of its own self-fulfi llment.
The notion of non-connective relation encapsulated in the phrase rela-
tion-of-nonrelation changes the meaning of “ participation. ” While at fi rst
sight participation may seem to have evaporated, it has actually redoubled.
It comes once in the fi elding of the multiplicity of contributory elements.
The multitude of atmospheric particles — each of which can be considered
an occasion of experience in its own right — create the conditions for the
strike of lightning by entering into a commotion of mutual interference
and resonance. Each actively participates in the production of the whole-
fi eld effects that energize the night sky for the coming event. The whole-
fi eld effects are a dynamic expression of each contributory element ’ s
remote participation in every other ’ s activity. The singularity of each ele-
ment ’ s activity is fused in the general fi eld activity whose tension potenti-
ates the event, and against which the added novelty of the fl ash stands
out, in the contrasting brightness of its own special activity. The participa-
tion of the conditioning elements occurs at a distance : between the ele-
ments; across the intervals actually separating them. The event comes
strikingly into itself against the background of what has now become its
contrasting fi eld of emergence. It sheers off from its fi eld of emergence,
into its own absolute individuality of occurrence. The event has partaken
of the potential bequeathed it by the general background activity. This
sheer partaking of potential is the second participation involved in the
concept of the relation-of-nonrelation. Here, participation is partitive (dis-
junctive or separative), in occurrent answer to the fusional participation
Introduction 23
of the fi elding (which is conjunctive in the envelopmental sense of a
dynamic mutual inclusion). The event, seen in this striking light, is doubly
participatory — but nowhere connective. It is nonlocal. Its conditions are
fi elded at a distance, and the dazzle of its culmination distances itself from
the fi eld of its emergence, in striking contrast to it (on ontogenetic con-
trast, see chapter 3).
The concept of the relation-of-nonrelation is that of nonlocality of rela-
tion. Relation is nonlocal in two co-implicated senses, corresponding to
the two modes of participation involved: 1) the fi elding of potential comes
of the intervals between elements and 2), the sheering away of the event
into the unity of its own occurrence asserts a parturitional interval between
itself, as extra-effective being, and the background of potential creating the
conditions for its birth. What participation means must be rearticulated in
light of the double nonlocality of relation. One of the stakes in that reart-
iculation will be the notion of causality. The fl ash of lightning is condi-
tioned , more than it is caused . It self-causes, given its conditions. To say
that it is caused would imply a genetic passivity. The paradigm of the
relation-of-nonrelation fi nds activity everywhere, in different modes (in
fi elding and striking; in general activity and special activity; and most
especially, in the bare activity hinging them).
Returning to the paradox of the virtual, that paradox is captured in the
continuation of a phrase by James cited earlier: “ full of both oneness and
manyness, in respects that don ’ t appear ” (James 1996a, 93 – 94). If the world
is made of expression, the implication of James ’ phrase is that there are
aspects of the world that are expressed without actually appearing. The
concept of the semblance is a way of making this paradox productive. It
is designed to deal with the complication that, for example, what is seen
with or through vision, without actually being seen in vision, is neverthe-
less perceptually felt, in effect. The semblance is the form in which what
does not appear effectively expresses itself, in a way that must be counted
as real. The example given above was the nonsensuous perception of the
mouse-line. The mouse-line was composed by a differential participation
of the senses in each other. The variety of the contributory sense modes
went actively unseen in the abstract sight of the rodent-infl ected vectoring
of experience. But there is also semblance of sorts in the lightning, even
though it is actually seen sensorially, in the sense that the appearance of
its dynamic form is accompanied by an actual impingement of light rays
24 Introduction
upon the retina. The visibility of the lightning brought the commotion of
elemental activity fi lling the night sky into vision, without it actually
showing. It got into the act, but was lost in the show. The fl ashiness of the
lightning was the brilliant tip of an atmospheric iceberg full of both
oneness and manyness, whose fi eld respects showily disappeared into the
ontogenetic background. The lightning is the appearing tip of a more
expansive event that never shows in its entirety. The fullness of the event ’ s
conditioning and occurrence is perceptually felt, in the dynamic form of
how what actually appears steals the show. Even if the event ’ s conditioning
elements and culmination are actual, the entirety of the event is virtual:
doubly nonlocal, nonsensuously present, registering only in effect, and on
all three counts really abstract.
In one semblant way or another, for lightning or for mice, a concept of
the effective reality of what doesn ’ t appear is essential to a philosophy
oriented to a thinking of process. The reason is simple: the main things
that don ’ t actually appear — yet are always expressed in some way in that
which does appear — are the past and the future. Atmospheric fi elding of
the elements was the immediate past of the lightning strike. The mouse-
line abstractly continued into the immediate future of unwanted encoun-
ter or escape. Process — event, change, production of novelty, becoming — all
imply duration. They are time concepts. Past, present, future are always
co-implicating. They are mutually included in each other. But they include
each other as different: as different dimensions of the dynamic unity of
the experience ’ s occurring, which by defi nition cannot appear with equal
billing (that is to say, sensuously). A semblance expresses this essential
disparity in the difference that it makes perceptually felt between sensuous
experience and nonsensuous reality. A semblance is always an expression
of time, though its nonsensuousness gives it an aftertaste of eternity. The
classic example is the lived semblance of the world of childhood that
Proust ’ s madeleine triggered into appearing without actually appearing.
Although actually unappearing, the semblance of the past was really felt,
with a self-creating spontaneity that imposed it as a fact of experience. The
semblance is a lived expression of the eternal matter-of-fact that is time ’ s
passing.
Paul Klee speaks of the task of composing semblances — making dimen-
sions of experience that don ’ t appear appear nevertheless in the dynamic
unity of an expressive act — as what defi nes aesthetic activity:
Introduction 25
It is not easy to arrive at a conception of a whole which is constructed from parts
belonging to different dimensions. And not only nature, but also art . . . is such a
whole. For . . . we lack the means of discussing in its constituent parts, an image
which possesses simultaneously a number of dimensions. . . . But, in spite of all
these diffi culties, we must deal with the constituent parts in great detail. . . . Our
courage may fail us when we fi nd ourselves faced with a new part leading in a
completely different direction, into new dimensions, perhaps into remoteness where
the recollection of previously explored dimensions may easily fade. To each dimen-
sion, as, with the fl ight of time, it disappears from view, we should say: now you
are becoming Past. But perhaps later at a critical — perhaps fortunate — moment we
may meet again on a new dimension, and once again you may become Present.
(Klee 1950, 15, 17)
To compose, we must deal with the “ constituent parts ” — contributory
factors of activity — in great detail. But the more detail with which we grasp
them, the more apt they are to fade into a remoteness where they recede
into nonrelation. Yet they may also advance into new experiential dimen-
sions, forwarding experience into new directions for composition. The
diagram, as explained above, is a word that activist philosophy uses to
name a speculative-pragmatic procedure for navigating this complexity of
experience ’ s passing, taking special aim on the “ critical ” moments. These
are the junctures where one moment of experience ’ s passing passes into
another, informing it of (in-forming it with) the potential to become again:
technique of existence. Klee ’ s reference to art and nature in this connection
implies that they are both compositional realities, that their compositions
involve a diagrammatic experience of becoming, and that this becoming
of experience is aesthetic in its multidimensionality.
This brings us to the fi nal question, that of experience in nonhuman
forms of life, and in nonliving matter itself. It was already asserted that
the world was made of expression. In this context, this is the same as saying
that the world is made of experience. If the world is made of experience,
there is perception everywhere in it. For activist philosophy, the question
of the nonhuman revolves around the question of nonhuman perception.
In what way can we say that what we have a tendency to separate out as
“ dumb matter ” in fact perceives and is therefore, by the precepts of activist
philosophy, experientially self-creative?
This question is only tangentially touched on in this book (for more,
see Massumi forthcoming). It will have to suffi ce to say that Whitehead
defi nes perception as “ taking account ” (Whitehead 1967a, 234 – 235;
26 Introduction
Whitehead 1967b, 69 – 70). Taking account means an event infl ecting the
arc of its becoming as a function of its feeling the infl uence of other events,
either in its initial conditions or en route. An electron is an occasion of
experience for Whitehead. It “ takes account ” of the electromagnetic fi eld
of the nucleus of the atom in the dynamic form of its orbit and in its
quantum character (the unity of the dynamic form expressed as its orbit
and energy level). The electron registers the “ importance ” of its fellow
creatures of the nucleus, and expresses it in the dynamic unity of its own
pathmaking. The trees along a river take account of the surrounding moun-
tains in how they are able to take in the rain washing down from them,
negotiating with their shadows for their growth, or availing themselves of
the mountain ’ s protection from the wind. The life of a tree is a “ society ”
of occasions of experience whose taking-account of other events — weather
events, geological events, the earth ’ s gravitation, the sun ’ s rising and set-
ting — contributes to a continuing growth pattern. Tree rings are one of the
ways in which this growing lived abstraction is seen for itself. Our taking
in the pattern at a glance is a semblance of a life. But even outside any
encounter with human perception, the electron, the mountains, the tree
involve perceptions. They are perceptions in themselves: they are how they
take account, in their own self-formative activity, of the world of activity
always and already going on around. 4
Whenever we see, whenever we perceptually feel, whenever we live
abstraction, we are taking in nonhuman occasions of experience. We are
inheriting their activity, taking it into our own special activity as a human
form of life: as a society of occasions of experience contributing to a con-
tinuing growth pattern it pleases us to call our human self. What we per-
ceptually feel to be our “ humanity ” is a semblance of that life. Like all
semblances, it is created through specifi c techniques of existence, in this
case, of historic proportions. And like all semblances, it appears most for
itself at the moment of its perishing (Foucault 1970, 422). The “ human ”
is a singularly historical virtual reality appearing through the animal body
it also pleases us to call human. “ Humanity ” is a growth ring expressing
a certain episode in the historic route of the collective life of our
animal body.
Like all animal forms of life, the human has a technique of existence
whose role is to selectively channel the nonhuman activity always going
on all around into its own special activity. That technique of existence is
Introduction 27
the body itself. The senses are procedures of the body as technique of
existence. The body is the seat of bare activity: the region of indistinction
between the human and matter where something doing is always already
just stirring, before it starts to take defi nitive experiential form. We do not
see the electrons traveling down our optic nerve. We see what our body
makes of their activity. We take their activity into our own, producing an
event of seeing — certainly a novelty for an electron. In the arcing of the
event toward the production of its novel outcome, physical matter, life
matter in general, and human life-matter are actively indistinguishable.
The body is the intensive milieu of active-matter indistinction in the midst
of which a human experience comes to fi nds itself.
Experience always invents. Every perception is a creative activity cul-
minating in the production of an event of change. A perception is its
own event. Its “ content ” is one with the dynamic form of its coming to
fulfi llment. What a perception invents is essentially itself. It is self-cre-
ative. There is nothing “ outside ” to which it corresponds or that it refl ects
or represents. All perception is immanent — in the case of animal life, to
the bodily milieu of its own becoming. When we see an “ object ” “ out
there ” we are seeing a semblance of our own life ’ s passing, immanent to
its own occurrence. If we focus exclusively on the chunkiness of the object
as it slothfully presents itself in the fl ow of change, we are living the
abstraction that the world comes in fundamentally inertial chunks of
what we are habitually tempted to call matter as opposed to life, or what
we like to think of as the concrete as opposed to the abstract (Manning
and Massumi, forthcoming a). This is Whitehead ’ s “ fallacy of misplaced
concreteness, ” which he considers the bane not only of most approaches
to philosophy, but also of classical science, not to mention common sense
(Whitehead 1967b, 51 – 52, 58). Deleuze restates it in the following way:
“ The opposite of the concrete is not the abstract, it is the discrete ”
(Deleuze, 1978a). The discrete: the slothful just-being-there of an inactive
chunk of matter.
“ In truth, the notion of the self-contained particle of matter, self-suffi -
cient within its local habitation, is an abstraction. ” (Whitehead 1968, 138).
There is, in bare matter of fact, “ no possibility of a detached, self-contained
local existence ” (ibid.).
The doctrine I am maintaining is that neither physical nature nor life can be under-
stood unless we fuse them together as essential factors in the composition of “ really
28 Introduction
real ” things whose interconnections and individual characters constitute the uni-
verse. . . . In conceiving the function of life in an occasion of experience, we must
discriminate the actualized data presented by the antecedent world, and the non-
actualized potentialities 5 which lie ready to promote their fusion into a new unity
of experience, and the immediacy of self-enjoyment which belongs to the creative
fusion of these data with those potentialities. (Whitehead 1968, 150 – 151)
Such is lived abstraction. “ Abstraction expresses nature ’ s mode of inter-
action and is not merely mental. When it abstracts, thought is merely
conforming to nature — or rather, it is exhibiting itself as an element in
nature ” (Whitehead 1985, 26). As for the body, “ it is part of the external
world, continuous with it, ” made of the same “ matter ” (or processual
matter of fact). It partakes of the same general activity:
In fact, [the body] is just as much part of nature anything else there — a river, or a
mountain, or a cloud. Also, if we are fussily exact, we cannot defi ne where a body
begins and where external nature ends. Consider one defi nite molecule. It is part of
nature. It has moved about for millions of years. Perhaps it started from a distant
nebula. It enters the body; it may be as a factor in some edible vegetable; or it passes
into the lungs as part of the air. At what exact point as it enters the mouth, or as it
is absorbed through the skin, is it part of the body? At what exact moment, later
on, does it cease to be part of the body? Exactness is out of the question. (Whitehead
1968, 21)
The only thing that is certain is that the body will have partaken. It will
have taken something of the world ’ s general activity into its own special
activity of expressing potential in life-advancing change taking place.
Matter, “ considered in abstraction of the notion of life, ” leads to an
impasse. “ We are left with the notion of an activity in which nothing is
effected ” (Whitehead 1968, 148). Nothing doing. “ Vacuous actuality ”
(Whitehead 1978, 29). Inactivist philosophy.
Ultimately, the thinking of speculative pragmatism that is activist
philosophy belongs to nature. Its aesthetico-politics compose a nature
philosophy. The occurrent arts in which it exhibits itself are politics
of nature.
The one-word summary of its relational-qualitative goings on: ecology .
Activist philosophy concerns the ecology of powers of existence. Becom-
ings in the midst. Creative change taking place, self-enjoying, humanly
or no, humanly and more (on the more-than-human, Manning
forthcoming a).
1 The Ether and Your Anger: Toward a Speculative
Pragmatism
Pragmatism is often understood to err on the side of the objective. Its
dictum that something is “ true because it is useful ” (James 1978, 98) is
easily caricatured as a philosophical apotheosis of American instrumental-
ism. Objects, it would seem, fi gure in the world according to their ends:
their potential to perform utilitarian functions. The world is a boundless
collection of exploitable resources through which the rugged individual
moves at will: user in a used world. The extreme objectivism of assuming
that the world is a preconstituted collection of objects defi ned by their
functional “ cash-value ” (James 1978, 32, 169) swings seamlessly into the
frontier subjectivism of the purposive human actor partaking freely of its
resources. As a result, pragmatism will just as often be understood as erring
on the side of the subjective. Concepts such as William James ’ s “ pure
experience ” seem to confi rm the objectivism even in their apparent appeals
to an ineffable subjective essence. Without the mooring in utility, the
subject would be swept away in the “ stream. ”
As James takes pains to suggest in the preface to The Meaning of Truth ,
it is necessary to understand pragmatism in the context of the allied theory
of radical empiricism in order to appreciate its force. Essays in Radical
Empiricism seems at fi rst to confi rm the emphasis on end-objects. “ What
knowing actually and practically amounts to [is a] leading-towards, namely
a terminating-in percepts ” (James 1996a, 25). A “ leading-towards, ” however,
is already much more open-ended than a “ use, ” as is a “ percept ” in com-
parison to a functional object. That a radical empiricism will not be either
a subjectivism or an objectivism is immediately announced in James ’ s
specifi cations that the terminating occurs “ through a series of transitional
experiences which the world supplies ” but that neither the experience nor
the percept arrived at are to be understood in terms of a subjectively
30 Chapter 1
contained consciousness (James 1996a, 25). What is radical about radical
empiricism is that there are not on the one hand objective-transitions-
leading-to-functional-ends and, on the other, experiences-and-percepts
corresponding to them in the subject. Classically, objects and their associ-
ated operations are in the world while percepts registering them are in the
subject. What James is saying, by contrast, is that both are in the transition .
Things and their experience are together in transition. There is no oscilla-
tion in the theory between extremes of objectivism and subjectivism
because the object and subject fall on the same side of a shared movement.
The question is what distinction their movement makes, according to which
they will fall on the same side. The answer will be surprising to those who
equate pragmatism with instrumentalism.
James uses the simple example of describing a building to a skeptical
friend (James 1996a, 54 – 56). There is nothing you can say that can verify
your description. There is no sure way for your friend to know that you ’ re
not being inaccurate or deceitful unless you walk together to the building
and you point out convergences between what you had said and what you
both are now experiencing. The truth of the experience is the fulfi lled
expectation. So far, it ’ s all pretty pedestrian. But for James, the demonstra-
tive pointing-out is less an external referencing of an object by a subject
than an indexing of two subjects to the same phase in the “ ambulatory ”
movement. The demonstrative puts the subjects in sync, as two poles of
the same fulfi llment. It is less indicative of an object than performative of
a sharing. The object does not fi gure “ in itself. ” It fi gures differentially, as
approached from disjunct perspectives (skepticism and the desire to con-
vince) linked in a moving-toward. The object fi gures again as bringing
those subjective poles of the movement into phase. Their difference of
approach is resolved in the collective ability to point and say, “ That ’ s it! ”
The demonstrative exclamation marks the operative inclusion of the object
in the movement, as a trigger of its elements ’ entering into phase. The
“ object ” is an exclamation point of joint experience. 1 In that punctuating
role, it is “ taken up ” by the movement. The object, along with the con-
cerned “ subjects, ” fi gure as differential poles integrating into a unity of
movement. The unity lasts as long as its demonstrative performance. It is
an event: a rolling of subjective and objective elements into a mutual
participation co-defi ning the same dynamic.
In the aftermath of the event, the unity resolves back into differentials,
and the movement continues, relatively de-defi ned again: it is possible that
The Ether and Your Anger 31
disagreement will arise later about what was demonstrated at that point.
The movement may then retrace its steps to repeat the demonstration,
exclaiming a different integration and a redefi nition. The object is taken
up by the movement again but in a new capacity, as an object no longer
only of skepticism but of dispute. Whether the object is strictly the “ same ”
as taken up differentially by the movement the second time as it was the
fi rst is not a question of concern to pragmatism. What is of interest is that
unfolding differentials phase in and out of integrating events in which
they fi gure as dynamically interlinked poles — that there is a punctuated
oneness in a manyness ongoing.
Once the emphasis is placed on the transitional-defi nitional nature of
the “ terminus, ” it is clear that the identity of the event ’ s elements cannot
predate their integration. What the object will defi nitely have been, and
what precisely will have been role of the subjects, is clear only in retrospect
after each integration — by which time they are already in transit to another
terminus. Already all over again in the making. James will go so far as to
say that what constitutes a subject and an object varies. An element that
was a subject at one terminus may be taken up as an object in the next,
or function as both at the same time (James 1996a, 13 – 15, 56 – 57). This is
obvious when you remember that as a perceiver you are always perceivable
by another, in whose experience you fi gure as an object. Or that an object
may be retaken up as a memory, crossing from objective to subjective status
(James 1996a, 61).
Subject and object are given operative defi nitions by pragmatism. They
are not placed in any kind of metaphysical contradiction or opposition.
They are defi ned additively (James 1996a, 9), according to their multiple
takings-up in events, in a continuing movement of integration and decou-
pling, phasing and dephasing, whose dynamic takes precedence over their
always provisional identities. Subject and object are grasped directly as
variations — not only of themselves but of each other. Their open-ended
ability to cross over into each other is the very “ stuff ” of the world (James
1996a, 4). As it is of experience. The phrase “ the world of experience ” is a
redundancy.
These Jamesian moves already undermine any equation of pragmatism
with a “ na ï ve ” instrumentalism, turning it decisively toward a philosophy
of the world ’ s continuing self-invention. This turn to a creative philosophy
allies pragmatism with Bergson and Whitehead more than to any other
currents. 2 In places, James makes the turn even more sharply. Ninety-nine
32 Chapter 1
times out of a hundred, he writes, the ideas we hold true are “ unterminated
perceptually, ” and “ to continue . . . is the substitute for knowing in the
completed sense ” (James 1996a, 69). A usefully terminated experience in
which the identity of the elements in play defi nitively crystallize into a
clearly objective or subjective role even for an exclamatory moment
is the exception. The world usually only brinks on defi nitive
self-punctuations.
Ether-waves and your anger, for example, are things in which my thoughts will
never perceptually terminate, but my concepts of them lead me to their very brink,
to the chromatic fringes and to the hurtful words and deeds which are their really
next effects. (James 1996a, 73)
The trigger-object is rarely arrived at as a terminus. The world (experience)
normally contents itself with brinking on “ really next effects. ” A terminus
is like a basin of attraction that draws you toward it, as by a gravitational
pull, but no sooner spins you off, as by a centrifugal force. The world
doesn ’ t stop at your anger. An angry word or deed snowballs into an
unfolding drama sweeping you and all around you along. You are always
really living in a centrifugal hurtle to a next effect.
We live, as it were, upon the front edge of an advancing wave-crest, and our sense
of a determinate direction in falling forward is all we cover of the future of our path.
It is as if a differential quotient should be conscious and treat itself as an adequate
substitute for a traced-out curve. Our experience . . . is of variations of rate and of
direction, and lives in those transitions more than in the journey ’ s end. (James
1996a, 69)
Rather than arriving at end-objects, or fulfi lling objective ends, we are
carried by wavelike tendencies, in a rollover of experiences perpetually
substituting for each other. “ We live forwards, ” but since we have always
already rolled on, “ we understand backwards ” (James 1996a, 238): partici-
pation precedes cognition . This is the sense of James ’ s famous saying that we
don ’ t run because we are afraid. We are afraid because we run.
Since we are always at the brink, we are too busy rolling on to doubt
the running reality. The question of the truth or falsehood of the crests
and troughs through which we pass — whether they are “ merely ” subjec-
tive, mere appearances or illusions — doesn ’ t even arise.
These [transitional] termini . . . are self-supporting. They are not “ true ” of anything
else, they simply are , are real. They “ lean on nothing. ” . . . Rather, does the whole
fabric of experience lean on them. (James 1996a, 202)
The Ether and Your Anger 33
In the end (or more precisely, in the never-ending) the pragmatic truth
is not fundamentally defi ned by a functional fi t between a will and a way,
or a propositional correspondence between subjective perceptions and a
self-same object. Rather, it has to do with a “ self-supporting ” of experience
brinking, on a roll to really-next-effects. What we experience is less our
objects ’ confi rmed defi nitions, or our own subjectivity, than their going-on
together — their shared momentum. Being swept up by the world consti-
tutes a lived belief in it: an immediate, moving, embodied, participatory
belief. 3 Belief is not propositional ( “ that is [what it is] ” ). It is the undoubt-
able rush of fear, anger, or expectation whose object has already zoomed
past before it is fully defi ned ( “ so that was it! ” ). “ Defi nitely felt transitions
. . . are all that knowing can possibly contain or signify ” (James 1996a,
56). Riding the wave, we are in “ a that which is not yet any defi nite what ,
tho ’ ready to be all sorts of whats; full of both oneness and manyness, but
in respects that don ’ t appear ” (James 1996a, 93 – 94). This, James writes,
is what I call pure experience. It is only virtually or potentially either object or
subject as yet. For the time being, it is plain, unqualifi ed actuality, a simple that .
(James 1996a, 23)
It is only when our idea [our expectation of perceiving something] has actually
terminated in the percept that we know “ for certain ” that from the beginning
it was truly cognitive of that . We were virtual knowers before we were certifi ed to
have been its actual knowers, by the percept ’ s retroactive validating power. (James
1996a, 68).
The surprise answer to the question of what distinction subjects ’ and
objects ’ shared movement makes is virtual-actual . “ As yet ” (on the crest)
subject and object are undetermined. They are only virtually subject or
object. Actually, they are what they will have been. The subject and the
object fall into defi nition on the same side of the actual-virtual distinction:
the actual side. That is, they fall in retroactively (in the trough). Their
actual defi nition is a kind of experiential doppler effect immediately reg-
istering their already having passed, in the momentary calm before the
next wave rolls up. Subjects and objects are not preconstituted foundations
for purposive movement yielding useful effects. They are effects: move-
ment-effects, directly registered passings-on that are also phasings-out.
How can James turn subjects and objects into phasings or effects and
also say that we have an immediate, undoubtable belief in the world?
Because even if you do not have a founding relation between a subject and
34 Chapter 1
an object, you still have an effective, if passing, relation of experience to
itself. “ Thoughts are made of the same stuff things are ” (James 1996a, 37);
“ The starting point becomes a knower and the terminus an object meant
or known ” (James 1996a, 57; emphasis added); “ The fi rst experience knows
the last one ” (James 1996a, 58) retrospectively. Thought and thing, subject
and object, are not separate entities or substances. They are irreducibly
temporal modes of relation of experience to itself. The wave crest is an inter-
ference pattern between the forward momentum, or prospective tending,
rolling on from its starting point in a last terminus toward an already
anticipated end-object, and the backwash of the really-next-effect by virtue
of which the starting point retroactively becomes a knowing subject. In
experience, what goes along comes around. The world rolls in on itself,
over its own expectations of reaching an end. It snowballs, start to termi-
nus. The world is self-supporting in the sense that it feeds on its own
momentum, folding its movement around on itself, always “ additively ”
(James 1996a, 110), the end of every roll a return to the beginning, only
more so: further on, spinning off virtual subjects and objects, like fl akes in
its actual wake. Everything in the world of experience is contained in this
self-augmenting movement. There is no opposition or contradiction, only
the productive paradox of a self-contained becoming. A becoming-more
and -many through the same momentum: many-more one-ward.
This brings us to James ’ s pivotal defi nition of what constitutes a radical
empiricism, and when coupled with pragmatism, precludes it being an
instrumentalism: the primacy of relation . The world revolves around its
momentous relation to itself. Relations, James insists, are as real as the
terms in relation (subjects, objects, sense data). And relations are them-
selves experienced.
The relations that connect experience must themselves be experienced relations,
and any kind of relation experienced must be accounted as “ real ” as anything else
in the system. (James 1996a, 42)
The parts of experience hold together from next to next by relations that are them-
selves part of experience. The directly apprehended universe needs, in short, no
extraneous trans-empirical connective support, but possesses in its own right a
concatenated or continuous structure. (James 1978, 173)
An example: giving. Our commonsense way of thinking about a relation
like giving would be to analyze it into its terms, or decompose it into parts,
and then put it all back together again. In this case, you decompose the
The Ether and Your Anger 35
giving into a giver (A), a gift (B), and a recipient (C). In theory, you should
be able to reconnect A to B (giver to gift) and B to C (gift to recipient) and
get the giving again. But what you actually get is two successive holdings:
A holding B, then C holding B, with nothing to hold the holdings together.
What holds the holdings together isn ’ t in the terms, or their part-to-part
connections. What holds the holdings together is a oneness-in-manyness
of a moving on. It is what runs through the parts and their holdings,
without itself being held; what is unmissably experienced without being
seen. That — the relation — is not in the giver. Nor is it in the gift. Nor the
recipient. It is what runs through them all, holding them together in the
same dynamic. It is integrally many things: “ concatenated and continu-
ous. ” It is whatever tendency impels or compels the giving. It is the desire
to please another, or to bind another to oneself. It is an obligation, which
obliges in return. For a giving is never solitary. It calls for more. It is serial,
ongoing. It is in the conventions that defi ne the timing and sequence, what
gift is desirable or appropriate, and when. It is also in the sensual qualities
of the gift (unromantically, its “ sense data ” ). It is the fragrance or the
sparkle. It is all of these things, folded into and around each other to form
an experiential envelope, a fi eld, “ full of oneness and manyness in respects
that don ’ t appear ” — incorporeal medium holding the gift up for the giving,
and holding the successive holdings to the same event. Holding-up/hold-
ing-together, integral unseen medium of suspension: that does it.
The suspension-event is an incorporeal envelope of sociality . The gift
relation is not fully personal or objective. It is immediately social — in a
way singularly independent from the particular nature of the terms in
social relation. The giver or recipient may be male or female, young or old,
or what not. The gift may be fl owers or diamonds, or what not. The that
holding the holdings together is a multiplicity of what-nots , a ready-to-be-
all-kinds. The relation is a suspension of the particular defi nitions of the
terms in relation. If it is as real as they are, its reality is of a different order:
an implicate order, of ready-to-be-things folded eventfully into each other.
If the implicate order is of the order of an event, then like every event,
really-next-effects will unfold from its happening: to be continued.
Again, “ really-next-effect ” means “ transition takes precedence. ” The gift
is defi ned as the object of the giving by the event of the offer ’ s passing
unbroken into an acceptance. Reciprocally, the giver and the recipient are
defi ned as the subjects of the giving by the object ’ s eventfully having
36 Chapter 1
passed. The radically empirical point is that the all-around lived medium,
or experienced envelope of relation, is a ready-to-be (virtual) coexistence
of terms held in a nondecomposable unity of movement that determines
what they will have been in passing. That translates into the conceptual
rule of thumb that the terms in relation belong to a different order than
their relation. Terms in relation, parts of the whole, serially unfold over
the course of events. But they do so by virtue of an infolding, or implicate,
order holding them, wholing them, fi elding them in the same event. The
logic of coexistence is different from the logic of separation. The logic of belonging
is different from the logic of being a part.
This means that to get the whole picture (including the real, suspended
ways it doesn ’ t appear), you have to operate with both logics simultane-
ously: the conjunctive and the disjunctive. “ Radical empiricism is fair to
both the unity and the disconnection ” (James 1996a, 47). It translates
metaphysical issues of truth and illusion, subject-object correspondence,
into issues of continuity and discontinuity .
These are basically pragmatic issues: when and how to make a break,
and in making a break fi eld a relation, and to what really-next-effect. (You
can never take back a gift. It incorporeally binds you to another, and in so
doing irreversibly cuts into your having been apart.)
Together, radical empiricism and the pragmatic theory of truth lead to
an odd constructivism in which experience is at the same time self-
standing and self-contained, and always to be invented according to
passing logics of break and relation. For it is always only in passing that
things prove useful: as provisionally as ether waves, as ephemerally as your
anger, as corruptibly as a gift. Things ’ only a priori function is of
becoming .
Approaching things this way saves you fussing over the cognitive status
of your experience. Disbelieving, are you? Feeling a tad illusionary? Don ’ t
worry. Everything is as real as its next-effect. Just concentrate on the break
and relation that will make a next-effect really felt. In any such event, as
you always are, you are already redundantly implicated in the world of
experience.
You do not run purposively through the world because you believe in
it. The world, surprisingly, already runs you through. And that, really felt,
is your belief in it. Virtual participation, really, brinking on truly, precedes
The Ether and Your Anger 37
actual cognition. This is what James means when he says “ we live on
speculative investments ” (James 1996a, 88; emphasis added). We fi nd
ourselves “ invested ” in the world ’ s running through our lives because
at every conscious moment our participation in it has just come to us
newly enacted, already and again, defying disbelief with the unrefusable
feeling of a life ’ s momentum. The “ speculation ” is the thinking-feeling of
our active implication in the ever-rolling-on in the world to really-next-
effects.
Break-and-relate to make felt an effect: a defi nition of art . Pragmatism,
as augmented by radical empiricism ’ s virtual friendly relationism, ends up
allying not with instrumentalism or any vulgar functionalism, but with art
(living art, arts of life). It has less to do with end-use than with transitional
expression: creative philosophy. The truth is not “ out there. ” It is in the
making.
2 The Thinking-Feeling of What Happens: Putting the
Radical Back in Empiricism
V2_Institute for the Unstable Media * What is central to interactive art is
not so much the aesthetic form in which a work presents itself to an
audience — as in more traditional arts like painting, sculpture, and video
installation art — but the behavior the work triggers in the viewer. The
viewer then becomes a participant in the work, which behaves in response
to the participant ’ s actions. Interactive art needs behavior on both sides of
the classical dichotomy of object and viewer. Paintings or installations also
trigger certain behaviors — from contemplation to excitement — but they
themselves do not change as a result of the behavior they inspire in their
audiences. It ’ s one-way traffi c; there ’ s no exchange. This raises several ques-
tions. First, since an interactive work aims to evoke a behavior in the
audience, can it really do without a form that is “ interesting ” and therefore
in some way aesthetic? Is putting a sign up saying “ You may touch the
work ” or “ You may interact with the work ” enough? When is the interac-
tion “ interesting ” enough to keep the audience interacting? Can or should
this interaction generate the sort of aesthetic experience that we associate
with the phenomenon of art? Or is interactive art about a different kind
or type of experiences compared to more traditional art forms?
Brian Massumi I ’ m glad you ’ re raising these questions. I think that there
is a real need right now to revisit the aesthetic in relation to interactive
art. It ’ s clear that saying “ You may interact with the work ” is not enough.
More and more things in our lives are saying that, and we don ’ t call them
* I would like to thank Arjen Mulder for creating the context for this conversation
by formulating the opening issues. I would also like to apologize to him for his
becoming a fi ctional character in the course of the subsequent semblance of a con-
versation. Any grumpiness that character might have displayed is in no way a
refl ection on him but only of my own combativeness with myself.
40 Chapter 2
art. We often don ’ t even call them interesting in any strong sense — more
like entertaining. If “ Please interact ” were enough to defi ne a category, it
would be gaming, not art. Beyond gaming in the strict sense, there is a
gaming paradigm that has moved into other domains. 1 You see it massively
in communications but also in marketing, design, training, education.
Places where it becomes serious and useful. Interactivity can make the
useful less boring and the serious more engaging. It is performance-
enhancing. It ’ s big business. It rarely has pretensions to art. This makes the
question of what it is in interactive art that makes it art all the more
insistent.
V2 So then how do you approach that question — particularly in a way
that allows you to defi ne what distinguishes interactive art from traditional
arts?
BM I personally don ’ t see how the question can be approached without
returning to the question of form. And that requires reconnecting with
aesthetics. That ’ s not a popular position in new media art. There is a wide-
spread attitude that aesthetic categories belong to the past. Many people
would say they just don ’ t apply, for the reasons you listed: interaction is
two-way, it ’ s participatory, and it evokes a behavior rather than displaying
a form. I ’ ve heard it said in no uncertain terms that form is dead. That we
just can ’ t think or speak in those terms any more. It ’ s almost an injunction.
I don ’ t mean to say it ’ s not a serious question. It ’ s identifying a real
problem. How do you speak of form when there is the kind of openness
of outcome that you see in a lot of new media art, where participant
response determines what exactly happens? When the artwork doesn ’ t
exist, because each time that it operates the interaction produces a varia-
tion, and the variations are in principle infi nite? When the artwork pro-
liferates? Or when it disseminates, as it does when the work is networked,
so that the interaction is distributed in time and space and never ties back
together in one particular form?
To begin with, you have to get past the idea that form is ever fi xed, that
there is any such thing as a stable form — even in traditional aesthetic
practices like fi gurative painting, or even in something as mundane as
decorative motif. The idea that there is such a thing as fi xed form is actu-
ally as much an assumption about perception as it is an assumption about
art. It assumes that vision is not dynamic — that it is a passive, transparent
The Thinking-Feeling of What Happens 41
registering of something that is just there, simply and inertly. If vision is
stable, then to make art dynamic you have to add movement. But if vision
is already dynamic, the question changes. It ’ s not an issue of movement
or no movement. The movement is always there, in any case. So you have
to make distinctions between kinds of movement, kinds of experiential
dynamics, and then ask what difference they make .
V2 In what way is there movement in vision? Your bringing up decorative
motif in this connection makes me think of an author of interest to both
of us, the philosopher of art Susanne Langer. Are you referring to her theo-
ries of perceptual movement in art?
BM Exactly. Langer reminds us that we see things we don ’ t actually see.
We all know it, but we tend to brush it off by calling it an illusion, as if
something is happening that isn ’ t real and doesn ’ t have anything impor-
tant to say about experience. But isn ’ t “ something happening ” the very
defi nition of real? The question is what exactly does the inconvenient
reality that we see things we don ’ t actually see say about the nature of
perception? Well, it changes everything. Langer starts from the simple
example of the kind of spiraling, vegetal motifs you see in a lot of tradi-
tional decorative arts. She states the obvious: we don ’ t see spirals, we see
spiral ing . We see a movement that fl ows through the design. That ’ s what it
is to see a motif. The forms aren ’ t moving, but we can ’ t not see movement
when we look at them. That could be another defi nition of real: what we
can ’ t not experience when we ’ re faced with it. Instead of calling it an
illusion — this movement we can ’ t actually see but can ’ t not see either —
why not just call it abstract? Real and abstract. The reality of this abstrac-
tion doesn ’ t replace what ’ s actually there. It supplements it. We see it with
and through the actual form. It takes off from the actual form. The actual
form is like a launching pad for it. We wouldn ’ t see the movement without
the design actually being there, but if we only saw the actual design we
wouldn ’ t be seeing what it is we ’ re seeing — a motif. The actual form and
the abstract dynamic are two sides of the same experiential coin. They ’ re
inseparable. They ’ re fused, like two dimensions of the same reality. We ’ re
seeing double.
V2 And that ’ s different from seeing an object — say, the leaves themselves
that suggested the motif? Weren ’ t you were saying that this tells us some-
thing about the nature of perception?
42 Chapter 2
BM Yes, the next question is if the same thing happens in so-called
natural perception of objects. It ’ s clear that it does. For example, to see an
object is to see volume. We don ’ t infer volume. We see the voluminousness
of an object, directly and immediately, without having to think about it.
We don ’ t say to ourselves, “ Let ’ s see, there ’ s a surface facing me, I would
wager that there is a backside to it, which means it ’ s a 3D object and
therefore I could walk around it and see and touch the other side. ” We
don ’ t say this to ourselves because we don ’ t say anything to ourselves. We
just see. We see what ’ s before us directly and immediately as an object. We
see the “ backedness ” of it without actually seeing around to the other side.
That ’ s precisely what makes it a perception of an object, rather than a
deduction about a surface. We are really but implicitly — abstractly — seeing
the object ’ s voluminousness. The perceived shape of an object is this
abstract experience of volume. Part of it, anyway, because we also directly
and immediately see an object ’ s weightiness. We see weightiness through
texture, for example. Voluminousness and weightiness are not in them-
selves visible. But we can ’ t not see them when we see an object. In fact,
we see them in the form of the object. Form is full of all sorts of things that
it actually isn ’ t — and that actually aren ’ t visible. Basically, it ’ s full of poten-
tial. When we see an object ’ s shape we are not seeing around to the other
side, but what we are seeing, in a real way, is our capacity to see the other
side. We ’ re seeing, in the form of the object, the potential our body holds
to walk around, take another look, extend a hand and touch. The form of
the object is the way a whole set of active, embodied potentials appears in
present experience: how vision can relay into kinesthesia or the sense of
movement, how kinesthesia can relay into touch. The potential we see in
the object is a way our body has of being able to relate to the part of the
world it happens to fi nd itself in at this particular life ’ s moment. What we
abstractly see when we directly and immediately see an object is lived
relation — a life dynamic.
Once again, we don ’ t see it instead of what we think of as being the
actual form of the object. We ’ re seeing double again. But this time, we ’ re
seeing the actual form “ with and through ” that set of abstract potentials.
The reason we ’ re directly seeing an object and not just a surface is because
we can ’ t not see what we ’ re seeing without also experiencing voluminous-
ness and weighti ness — the object ’ s invisible qualities . Seeing an object is
seeing through to its qualities. That ’ s the doubleness: if you ’ re not
The Thinking-Feeling of What Happens 43
qualitatively seeing what isn ’ t actually visible, you ’ re not seeing an object,
you ’ re not seeing objectively. “ Objectifi cation itself is abstraction. . . .
Abstraction expresses nature ’ s mode of interaction and is not merely
mental ” (Whitehead 1985, 25 – 26). Deleuze drives the point home: “ the
abstract is lived experience. . . . you can live nothing but the abstract ”
(Deleuze 1978).
Certain currents in embodied perception take this to heart. Alva No ë ,
for example, concludes that all visual perception is “ virtual ” (No ë 2004,
50, 66 – 67, 134 – 135). Seeing, he says, is a kind of action. Only, I would say,
without the actual action — with the action appearing in potential. We
never just register what ’ s actually in front of our eyes. With every sight we
see imperceptible qualities, we abstractly see potential, we implicitly see a
life dynamic, we virtually live relation. It ’ s just a kind of shorthand to call
it an object. It ’ s an event . An object ’ s appearance is an event, full of all sorts
of virtual movement. This is real movement, because something has hap-
pened: the body has been capacitated. It ’ s been relationally activated. It is
alive in the world, poised for what may come. That is also “ seen ” — there ’ s
a sense of aliveness that accompanies every perception. We don ’ t just look,
we sense ourselves alive. Every perception comes with its own “ vitality
affect, ” to use a term of Daniel Stern ’ s (Stern 1985, 53 – 61; Stern 2010).
That ’ s why we see movement in a motif. The form naturally poises the
body for a certain set of potentials. The design calls forth a certain vitality
affect — the sense we would have, for example, of moving our eyes down
a branch of rustling leaves, and following that movement with our hands.
But that life dynamic comes without the potential for it to be actually
lived. It ’ s the same lived relation as when we “ actually ” see leaves, it ’ s the
same potential. But it ’ s purely potential. We can ’ t live it out. We can only
live it in — in this form — implicitly. It ’ s like the motif has taken the abstrac-
tion that is the leaf and made it appear even more abstractly. So abstractly,
it can ’ t go any further than this appearance. The body is capacitated, but
the capacity has nowhere else to go. It ’ s in suspense. Langer calls this a
“ semblance ” (1953, 45 – 68 and passim). The concept also appears in strik-
ingly similar ways in Walter Benjamin ’ s early work on art and aliveness
(Benjamin 1996b, 1996c).
A semblance takes the abstraction inherent to object perception and
carries it to a higher power. It does this by suspending the potentials pre-
sented. Suspending the potentials makes them all the more apparent by
44 Chapter 2
holding them to visual form. The relays to touch and kinesthesia will not
take place. These potentials can only appear and can only appear visually.
The event that is the full-spectrum perception is and will remain virtual.
A life dynamic is presented but virtually, as pure visual appearance.
This produces another level of vitality affect. It feels different to see a
semblance. Even in something so banal as a decorative motif, there is the
slightly uncanny sense of feeling sight see the invisible. The action of
vision, the kind of event it is, the virtual dimension it always has, is high-
lighted. It ’ s a kind of perception of the event of perception in the percep-
tion. We experience a vitality affect of vision itself. This is like the doubleness
of perception I was talking about becoming aware of itself. A kind of direct
and immediate self-referentiality of perception. I don ’ t mean self-refl exiv-
ity, which would be thinking about a perception as from a distance or as
mediated by language. This is a thinking of perception in perception,
in the immediacy of its occurrence, as it is felt — a thinking-feeling, in
visual form.
Semblances, by whatever name — pure appearances, self-abstracting per-
ceptions, thinking-feelings — occur in so-called natural perception. That ’ s a
misleading category if ever there was one — as if seeing a leaf motif were
somehow less natural than seeing a leaf. Still, there is an important differ-
ence. The perception of any object also involves the thinking-feeling of a
semblance. It ’ s just that the semblance is backgrounded. An object is a
semblance to the extent that we think-feel things like its backedness,
volume, and weight. But that thinking-feeling slips behind the fl ow of
potential action that the objectness suggests. We let the vitality affect, the
“ uncanny ” apprehension of the qualitative dimension, pass unnoticed.
Instead, we orient toward the instrumental aspect of the actions and reac-
tions that the perception affords. The self-refl exivity of the experience is
backgrounded. The sense of relational aliveness disappears into the living.
The “ uncanniness ” of the way in which the object appears as the object it
is — as if it doubled itself with the aura of its own qualitative nature — dis-
appears into a chain of action. We live out the perception, rather than
living it in. We forget that a chair, for example, isn ’ t just a chair. In addi-
tion to being one it looks like one. The “ likeness ” of an object to itself, its
immediate doubleness, gives every perception a hint of d é j à vu. That ’ s the
uncanniness. The “ likeness ” of things is a qualitative fringe, or aura to use
a totally unpopular word, that betokens a moreness to life. It stands in the
The Thinking-Feeling of What Happens 45
perception for perception ’ s passing. It is the feeling in this chair of past
and future chairs “ like ” it. It is the feeling in this chair that life goes on.
It presents, in the object, the object ’ s relation to the fl ow not of action but
of life itself, its dynamic unfolding, the fact that it is always passing
through its own potential. It ’ s how life feels when you see it can seat you.
In Antonio Damasio ’ s terms, it ’ s the “ feeling of what happens, ” that back-
ground feeling of what it ’ s “ like ” to be alive, here and now, but having
been many elsewheres and with times to come. 2 Art brings that vitality
affect to the fore.
All of this suggests a way of bringing art and “ natural ” perception
together while still having a way of distinguishing them. In art, we see life
dynamics “ with and through ” actual form. Or rather, we always see rela-
tionally and processually in this way, but art makes us see that we see this
way. It is the technique of making vitality affect felt. Of making an explicit
experience of what otherwise slips behind the fl ow of action and is only
implicitly felt. Of making the imperceptible appear. In everyday percep-
tion, the same thing occurs. There is an artfulness in every experience. Art
and everyday perception are in continuity with one another. But in every-
day experience, the emphasis is different. It is all a question of emphasis,
an economy of foregrounding and backgrounding of dimensions of experi-
ence that always occur together and absolutely need each other. Art fore-
grounds the dynamic, ongoingly relational pole. Everyday experience
foregrounds the object-oriented, action-reaction, instrumental pole. That
pole comes across as stable because it offers our action perches —
” affordances ” in J. J. Gibson ’ s vocabulary (1986, 36, 137 – 138). We attend
to the perchiness, and let the other side of that same coin, the passing-
relation side, slip behind the use we can exact from the perception. Art
brings back out the fact that all form is a full-spectrum dynamic form of
life. There is really no such thing as fi xed form — which is another way of
saying that the object of vision is virtual. Art is the technique for making
that necessary but normally unperceived fact perceptible, in a qualitative
perception that is as much about life itself as it is about the things we live
by. Art is the technique of living life in — experiencing the virtuality of it
more fully. Living it more intensely. Technique of existence (chapter 3).
This also suggests a way of dealing with the question of interaction in
art, and why the question of whether or not it is art comes up so insistently.
Despite the term inter activity , the emphasis is rarely on the dynamic form
46 Chapter 2
of the experience in all its dimensions. It is the form of the technical object
that is emphasized, for what it affords. The emphasis is on the perches it
offers for a relaying from action to reaction and back again. It is supposed
to be all about social relation, but the dynamic form of the experience
tends to get reduced to the instrumental affordance as concretized in the
actual form of the technical object. It gets reifi ed in an objective function.
The technical object is action-packed. But the sense of action is con-
strained, subordinated to functional circuits of action-reaction that are to
a large extent predetermined to respond to what are taken to be existing
needs or wants.
Inter action is just that: a going back and forth between actions, largely
reduced to instrumental function. The lesson of the semblance is that lived
reality of what is happening is so much more, qualitatively. It includes an
“ uncanny ” moreness to life as an unfolding lived relation in a world whose
every moment is intensely suffused with virtuality — an abstractly felt
“ backside, ” or voluminousness, of life itself. When what is concentrated
on are instrumentalized action-reaction circuits, what gets foregrounded is
the element of nextness in the fl ow of action. The voluminousness of the
experience, its all-aroundness and going-for-moreness, shrinks from feeling.
That is why I make a distinction between interactivity and relation. I
use the word interactivity to designate an instrumentally contracted dynamic
form that tends to shrink to the parameters of its objectively embodied
instrumental function. I use the word relation to refer to the full spectrum
of vitality that the dynamic form really includes, potentially, abstractly
self-expressed in its semblance. Interactivity backgrounds its own artistic
dimension when it concentrates on the function of the instrument to the
detriment of the semblant expression. That ’ s what has happened when we
hear the comment, all too common, from interactive art participants that
the experience felt like a video game. You often feel there ’ s a trick you need
to fi nd and master, and once you ’ ve done that, you lose interest because
you ’ ve got the feel of it and know how it “ works. ” When something loses
intensity instead of becoming more compelling when you get the feel of
it, it is a sure sign that it is operating more on a level of predefi ned objec-
tive function than fully lived relation.
I ’ m not saying that all interactive art does this. It ’ s just that this is the
trap that is automatically laid for it, the problem it has to grapple with by
its very nature. The problem is: in what way is this different from a game?
The Thinking-Feeling of What Happens 47
Is this doing something that mainstream informational capitalism isn ’ t
already doing, ever so profi tably, by generalizing the gaming paradigm?
What ’ s new or different or intensely feeling or vitally voluminous or virtu-
ally freeing about it? Paradoxically, the intensity of the dynamic form of
the experience comes out most effectively when action-reaction circuits
are artfully suspended or (even better in this context) when the action line
itself is accompanied by a continuous semblance of itself, an ongoing
perception of its singular eventfulness doubling the functional perception
of the affordances offered and taken. The production of a perception of
perception suspending or abstractly doubling action-reaction is an idea
that Deleuze develops at length in connection to an older dynamic form
in his Cinema books (1986, 1989).
V2 It sounds like you ’ ve boxed interactivity into a corner. If interactive
art is about concrete action and art is more about abstract perception, then
it sounds like it can ’ t ever really aspire to art. The way you ’ ve approached
the question also seems to resuscitate some very old ideas about art — for
example, the classical idea that it is “ disinterested. ” The modernist version
of that idea is that art has to be about “ estrangement. ” Isn ’ t your idea of
suspension of causal action-reaction chains just rehabilitating these
notions? That neglects a major motivation behind a lot of new media art.
A lot of people consider the traditional ways of doing art to be passifying
precisely because they suspend. That artistic gesture is critiqued for creating
a false sense of art ’ s “ autonomy. ” Elitism is another word many people
would use for that, and for art ’ s aura. Interactive art is meant to take art
out of its ghetto, out of the gallery, out of the frame, and into life. And
you ’ re saying it misses the liveness. Interactivity is often looked on as
liberating because it does this. For a lot of practitioners, that ’ s the whole
point of it. How would you respond to this kind of criticism?
BM I entirely endorse attempts to bring life into art and art into life —
although I ’ m not sure if I subscribe to all of the assumptions about art and
about life that often go with explanations of why and how this should be
done. For example, I think the notion of framing in these kinds of critique
is often very reductive. But before I go into that, I think it ’ s important to
remind ourselves that there can be a kind of tyranny to interaction.
Interactivity is not neutral with respect to power. In fact, according to
Foucault, among the most invidious of regimes of power are the ones that
48 Chapter 2
impose an imperative to participate, particularly when the imperative is to
express yourself “ truly ” or “ authentically. ” You are constantly interpel-
lated. You are under orders to be yourself — for the system. You have to
reveal yourself for who you are. In fact, you become who you are in
expressing yourself. You are viscerally exposed, like a prodded sea cucum-
ber that spits its guts. You are exposed down to your inmost sensitive folds,
down to the very peristaltic rhythms that make you what you are. This is
generative power, a power that reaches down into the soft tissue of your
life, where it is just stirring, and interactively draws it out for it to become
what it will be, and what it suits the system that it be. This is what Foucault
calls “ positive ” power or “ productive ” power. It produces its object of
power interactively through its own exercise. That object of power is your
life. Not just your behavior, not just your labor — your life. It ’ s what Fou-
cault calls “ biopower ” (2008). It ’ s a soft tyranny.
You see it everywhere today. The telltale sign is the positive feedback
loop. For example, you buy things with your credit card, presumably to
satisfy needs or desires in your life. Needs, desires: you purchase at your
soft points. That visceral act is actually an interaction: you have just par-
ticipated in a data-mining operation. Your input feeds a marketing analysis
apparatus, and that feeds a product development machine. The system
eventually gets back to you with new products responding to the input,
and with new ways to reach you, massage your rhythms, air out your
viscera, induce you to spend. New needs and desires are created. Even
whole new modes of experience, which your life begins to revolve around.
You have become, you have changed, in interaction with the system. You
have literally shopped yourself into being. At the same time, the system
has adapted itself . It ’ s a kind of double capture of mutual responsiveness
in a reciprocal becoming.
This is just a quick example to make the point that interactivity can be
a regime of power. It is often thought that the limitations of interaction
within predetermined parameters of functioning, of the kind I was just
talking about, can be easily overcome by making the interaction evolution-
ary through feedback. My example of biopower is precisely an example of
an evolutionary interaction. It is simply not enough to champion interac-
tivity. You have to have ways of evaluating what modes of experience it
produces, what forms of life those modes of experience might develop into,
The Thinking-Feeling of What Happens 49
and what regimes of power might arise from those developments. The
power element is always there, at least on the horizon. You have to strat-
egize around it. You have to strategize how not to make prodded sea
cucumbers of your participants, at the same time as you don ’ t want to just
let them stay in their prickly skins. Simply maximizing interaction, even
maximizing self-expression, is not necessarily the way. I think you have to
leave creative outs. You have to build in escapes. Drop sinkholes. And I
mean build them in — make them immanent to the experience. If the inside
folds interactively come out, then fold the whole inside-outside interaction
in again. Make a vanishing point appear, where the interaction turns back
in on its own potential, and where that potential appears for itself. That
could be a defi nition of producing an aesthetic effect. The semblances I
was talking about earlier could be a defi nition of aesthetic effect.
Understood in the way I ’ m talking about, an aesthetic effect is not just
decoration. I started with a decorative example, but the point I wanted to
make was not that art is decorative but rather that even decorative art is
a creative event, however modest. It creates a semblance. A semblance is
a placeholder in present perception of a potential “ more ” to life. The
framing of it determines the intensity or range or seriousness of that
potential.
Take the way a simple object is doubled by its own “ likeness. ” You don ’ t
just have an experience of the single present thing. You at the same time
experience what it ’ s like to experience its presence. That “ likeness ” marks
the object as a variation on itself. You perceive what it ’ s like because in
your life there have been other appearings “ like ” this one, and you implic-
itly anticipate more will come. The likeness is the invisible sign of a con-
tinuing. This puts a certain distance between the object and itself. A kind
of self-abstraction. The thing stands for itself, and for difference from itself
over time. Because in time it will appear episodically, under variation. It
holds these variations-on in the present, which is why it is a kind of imme-
diate, lived abstraction. This haloes the object with certain genericness,
extending what it is beyond its own particularity. The thing is both itself
and a placeholder in life ’ s process for others like it. The semblance is the
leading edge, in the present, of future variation, and at the same time
a doppler from variations past. It is the thing ’ s perceived margin of
changeability, the thinking-feeling of potential appearings of particulars
50 Chapter 2
belonging to the same genre, appearing in the same style. A semblance is
a direct perception of a life style . It is like an intuition of the thing as a life
motif — a pattern of varied repetitions.
Each repetition will be different to a degree, because there will be at
least microvariations that give it its own singular experiential quality and
make it an objective interpretation of the generic motif. The semblance
makes each particular a singular-generic. It is because it presents difference
through variation that it is a thinking-feeling of a margin of changeability.
You could even say of indeterminacy, since likenesses can overlap and
contaminate each other. A chair is like itself and the next chair. But it is
also like a sofa, from the perchabilitiy point of view. How far the “ likeness ”
goes is determined by the body ’ s relation to the thing. It ’ s not cognitive
per se, like a recognition or deduction. It ’ s integral. A thinking at one with
a feeling: a thinking-further fused with a feeling of what is. But the fusion
is asymmetrical because the feeling of what is zeroes in on what can be
settled in the present, while the thinking-further pulls off-center and away
toward more, so that together they make a dynamic, never quite at equi-
librium. This gives the present perception its own momentum, even
though it can ’ t presently signpost exactly where it ’ s going. It ’ s more an
open-ended tending-to than a refl ection-of or a refl ecting-on. It ’ s a pos-
ture — if you can call a disposition to moving in a certain style a posture.
It ’ s a dynamic posture. The “ likeness ” will smudge strictly logical categories
to the extent that the body tends-to, moves on, transfers habits, refl exes,
competencies, and thinking-feelings from one thing to the next, expands
its repertory of dynamic postures by mixing, matching and alloying them,
explores its own living potential, strikes new postures — invents new ways
of affording itself of the world, in collaboration with the world, with what
the world throws before it. A singular-generic is not a general category,
anymore than it ’ s just a particular. It ’ s not positioned in a way that pigeon-
holes it. It ’ s on the move — it ’ s on a dis positional continuum. There is no
such thing as site-specifi c. The very word conjures up the notion of “ simple
location ” that Whitehead identifi ed as the basic error of modernity (White-
head 1967b, 49, 58, 91).
At any rate, thought and imagination are the leading edges of this
exploratory expansion of potential, because they can wander from the
particular present posture even without actually leaving it. And without
being limited to the potential next steps that it most presents, that it makes
The Thinking-Feeling of What Happens 51
most available or automatic. They raise the smudge factor exponentially.
A thing felt is fringed by an expanding thought-pool of potential that
shades off in all directions. It ’ s like a drop in the pool of life making ripples
that expand infi nitely around. William James spoke in those terms. He said
experience comes in “ drops ” (James 1996b, 231 – 232).
The semblance, or pure appearance, of a thing is a kind of processual
distance it takes on itself. When in the course of everyday life we march
habitually and half-consciously from one drop of life to the next, we don ’ t
attend to the ripples. We see through the semblance to the next, not letting
it appear with all its force. It ’ s like the thing falls back from the distance
it potentially takes on itself. It closes in on itself. It falls from its distance
on itself into itself. As a result, it appears banal, so paltry a thing that we
just pass on to the next thing, hardly noticing what the last one was “ like. ”
Only the most available and automatic ripple ring of potential appears,
and often even then barely at the threshold of awareness. In his writings
on art, Deleuze often says that to really perceive, to fully perceive, which
is to say to perceive artfully, you have to “ cleave things asunder ” (Deleuze
1995, 86), You have to open them back up. You have to make their sem-
blance appear as forcefully as possible. You have to give the thing its dis-
tances back. He quotes Francis Bacon: you have to make a Sahara of it
(Deleuze 2004b, 82, 128). You do this, in Bacon ’ s words again, as a “ matter
of fact. ” Not as a matter of principle. Not as a matter of opinion. Not in
accordance with purely logical categories, progressions, and relations. Not
to represent. Not to refl ect. Instead, as an event. In a drop of lived relation
that has a style all its own, that exemplifi es its own singular-generic logic,
and is as really appearing as it is infi nitely expansive.
This sundering of things is what I meant by “ suspension. ” It ’ s the oppo-
site of “ disinterestedness, ” if you interpret that to mean neutrality or a
subjective posture of noncommittal. The semblance is not subjective. As I
tried to explain, it makes the object an object. There is no subject, apart
from the singular aliveness appearing in the object ’ s generic wake. The
subject is life. This life. “ A ” life, as Deleuze would say (Deleuze 2007,
384 – 89). So the process I ’ m talking about can ’ t ever be contained by any
elitism because it always potentially exceeds, at very least on its outermost
fringes, any standard of taste or coolness that a particular social grouping
might succeed in imposing on it. It ’ s the opposite of all that. It ’ s intensify-
ing. Enlivening. Potentializing.
52 Chapter 2
It ’ s artifi cial to talk about this only in relation to single things. Every
thing appears in a situation, along with others. The situation itself is a
life-drop. A bigger drop, with its own ripples of potential that overlap with
those of its constituent things but can also diverge from them, subtract
them from itself or alloy them in other confi gurations. Every appearance
is at a crossroads of life. At the limit, what appears isn ’ t just a drop or a
pool, but a whole ocean, with calm stretches and turbulence, ripplings that
cancel each other out and others that combine and amplify, with crests
and troughs, killer surf-breaks and gentle lappings at the shores of other
situations. For James, the fact that experience comes in drops doesn ’ t mean
it can ’ t also come with “ oceanic ” feeling.
What interactive art can do, what its strength is in my opinion, is to
take the situation as its “ object. ” Not a function, not a use, not a need, not
a behavior, exploratory or otherwise, not an action-reaction. But a situa-
tion, with its own little ocean of complexity. It can take a situation and
“ open ” the interactions it affords. The question for interactive art is, How
do you cleave an interaction asunder? Setting up an interaction is easy. We
have any number of templates for that. But how do you set it up so you
sunder it, dynamically smudge it, so that the relational potential it tends-
toward appears? So that the situation ’ s objectivity creatively self-abstracts,
making a self-tending life-movement, a life-subject and not just a setup.
How, in short, do you make a semblance of a situation? These are technical
questions, essentially about framing, about what it means to frame an
event situationally or house a dispositional life-subject. You can get there
technically — in fact whatever the nature of the object involved, it is always
a question of technique — but when you do it ’ s not because you ’ ve build a
better-functioning machine. It ’ s because you ’ ve built into the operation
shifts in emphasis from interaction to lived relation. You ’ re creating ways
of making the lived relation really appear. You ’ re operating on the qualita-
tive level of thinking-feeling, where you are pooling styles of being and
becoming, not just eliciting behaviors.
There are practices, of course, that already do this implicitly to one
degree or another, usually in a more determinate way, more narrowly
focused on ensuring regular and dependable affordances, functional or
instrumental perchings, rather than by sundering and fringing. What is
architecture, if not “ site-specifi c ” life-design? What is an institution, if not
a distributed architecture of experience? Architecture and institutions are
The Thinking-Feeling of What Happens 53
two dynamically connected poles on a processual continuum between
positioning and disposition, settling the present and disseminating settle-
ment. A practice that pries open existing practices, of whatever category,
scale, siting, or distribution, in a way that makes their potential reappear
at a self-abstracting and self-differing distance from routine functioning,
in a potentialized semblance of themselves — variational practice of that
kind could be called (to borrow the felicitous term Rafael Lozano-Hemmer
applies to his own approach to interactive art) a relational architecture
(Massumi 2000). A relational architecture is oriented toward the dissemi-
nating end of things, toward potential expansion, but is anti-institutional.
It unsettles. It pushes the dispositional envelope of the processual con-
tinuum just mentioned.
That ’ s the angle from which I would encourage a rethinking of interac-
tive art — from the premise that its vocation is to construct a situation or
go into an existing situation, and open it into a relational architecture.
Ways of doing that, the nuts and bolts of making potential reappear, are
what Erin Manning and I in our collaborative work call techniques of relation
(Manning 2009b, 42, 86 – 93, 105; Manning and Massumi, forthcoming b).
The techniques of existence discussed throughout this book are techniques
of relation. We use the word technique in a sense inspired by Gilbert
Simondon, whose account of technical invention is couched in similar
terms of emergent relational potential and becoming, in a way that places
the technical object and art in the same orbit without reducing one to the
other (Simondon 1989, 179 – 201). The difference, of course, is that the
regulatory principles of the technical process in the narrow sense are utility
and salability, profi t-generating ability. Art claims the right to have no
manifest utility, no use-value, and in many cases even no exchange-value.
At its best, it has event-value .
This is precisely what makes art political, in its own way. It can push
further to the indeterminate but relationally potentialized fringes of exist-
ing situations, beyond the limits of current framings or regulatory prin-
ciples. Aesthetic politics is an exploratory politics of invention, unbound,
unsubordinated to external fi nalities. It is the suspensive aspect of it that
gives it this freedom. The suspension of the most available potentials, the
potentials already most comfortingly embodied, well housed and usefully
institutionalized gives a chance for more far-fetched potentials to ripple
up. Aesthetic politics is “ autonomous ” in the sense that it has its own
54 Chapter 2
momentum, it isn ’ t beholden to external fi nalities. It bootstraps itself on
its own in-built tendencies. It creates its own motive force in the dynamic
form in which it appears. Practices that explicitly defi ne themselves as
political and do not claim the artistic label can be characterized as aesthetic
politics to the extent that they similarly strive to bootstrap far-fetching
event-value and make it really, tendentially appear in a present situation.
This kind of practice has been with us, not continuously but in drops and
smudges, since at least the Situationists, and it gained new momentum in
our own time in the antiglobalization movement post-Seattle.
Artistic practices that explicitly attempt to be political often fail at it,
because they construe being political as having political content, when
what counts is the dynamic form. An art practice can be aesthetically
political, inventive of new life potentials, of new potential forms of life,
and have no overtly political content. I would go so far as to say that it is
the exception that art with overtly political content is political in the sense
I ’ m talking about here. When it is, it ’ s because care has been taken not
only to make sense but to make semblance, to make the making-sense
experientially appear, in a dynamic form that takes a potential-pushing
distance on its own particular content.
The work of Natalie Jeremijenko and the Bureau of Inverse Technology
stands out in this regard. In recent interactive projects, Jeremijenko has
attempted to not only to encourage participants to refl ect on environmen-
tal issues, focusing in this case on human-animal relations, but she has used
the interactions to slip participants into perceiving, in one case, like a fi sh.
The ideational content was doubled by a perceptual becoming. The think-
ing-feeling-like-a-fi sh was the semblance in the situation, pointing beyond
it. A quality of experience was built in that could potentially lead to
thoughts, sensations, and further perceptions that might fold out, toward
follow-on in other situations that neither the participants nor the artist
could foresee (never having been an environmentally aware fi sh before).
An aesthetic politics defi es the law of the conservation of energy. It can
get more creative energy out of a situation than it puts into it. It ’ s inven-
tive in a more radical way than a technical invention in the usual narrow
sense. It ’ s not the gadgetry or setup that ’ s creative, even if nothing like it
has ever been seen before. The setup is creative to the extent that an emer-
gent experience takes off from it that has its own distinctive lived quality,
and because of that its own self-differing momentum.
The Thinking-Feeling of What Happens 55
V2 It ’ s quite a stretch to go from a decorative motif to a worldwide politi-
cal movement, not to mention human fi sh. Some might accuse you of
explanatory overkill. For one thing, all of the main examples you ’ ve given
are visual. One orientation that is almost universally shared in new media
art is a turning away from the visual in favor of the tactile or haptic. This
is considered a political gesture because the visual has long been critiqued
as a form of dominance under the name ocularcentrism. How does the
perspective you ’ re advancing position itself with respect to that? How can
you generalize from simple visual examples to interactive art that tries to
access other dimensions of the body, against the domination of vision?
BM Vision has gotten bad press. When people talk about the visual, what
they are actually talking about is almost always a certain mode of what in
perception studies is called cross-modal transfer — a certain way that differ-
ent senses interoperate. How, for example, does classical perspective paint-
ing create an experience of depth? By composing lines and colors in such
a way as to trigger a direct experience of the potential I was talking about
in relation to object awareness in so-called natural perception: the poten-
tial to advance, move around, bring backsides into view, and touch. This
is a direct visual experience. But vision has been crafted in such a way as
to wrap potential kinesthesias and tactilities into itself . It ’ s a semblance, just
as the object itself was, but with the objective potential suspended, because
you can ’ t actually advance and touch. It ’ s object-perception, without the
object. The object was already an abstraction, in the sense that what made
it appear as an object and not a one-sided surface was what didn ’ t appear,
or only virtually appeared — the relays to other sensings. Perspective paint-
ing doesn ’ t “ trick ” object-perception. It activates it otherwise. The experi-
ence of depth is not an optical “ illusion. ” It ’ s a real experience of depth,
minus the depth. The experience of depth has been made to take off from
its usual experiential framing and enter a different frame.
What perspective painting does is tap into the abstraction already at the
basis of object perception, and carry it to a higher power, where the object
itself, and not only touchings of it and movings-around it, are abstracted,
that is to say, really appear virtually, in pure appearance. That pure appear-
ance occurs through an actual object — the canvas, frame, and pigment
setup. But the painting as actual object in its own right disappears into the
abstraction it taps. When you are experiencing painted depth, you aren ’ t
looking at a canvas, you are seeing a scene. You ’ re seeing through the canvas
56 Chapter 2
into an abstraction that has taken off from it, and is a qualitatively differ-
ent perceptual event. Your perception has been siphoned into the sem-
blance, the canvas ’ s ghostly perceptual double. The semblance can ’ t happen
without a perch in objecthood. But when it happens, it is in uncanny
excess of actual objectivity. Of course the uncanniness effect weakens with
time, as people ’ s perception habituates. At fi rst, it is directly apparent, and
not only that, it hits like a force — think of the fi rst cinematic images that
had audiences fl eeing before the virtual advance of a train. A semblance
isn ’ t just like a force. Its “ likeness ” is a force, an abstract force of life.
Lumi è re ’ s moving images were literally capable of launching live bodies
into fl ight.
The force of the semblance can be seized upon and made use of. It is
no accident that the development of perspective painting was associated
with the rise of court society. The “ aura ” of it was seized upon and used
to heighten the prestige-value of the monarchy at a time when it was
evolving in certain parts of Europe toward absolutism. The aesthetic event-
value was captured by that political formation and translated into political
prestige-value. The semblance that took off from the framed canvas was
reframed by the court institution, which gave it an abstract function inte-
gral to its own dynamic system.
Photography also lent the aura to reframings of value. The photographic
semblance came at a time when production and consumption were being
privatized. It was used to transfer the royal “ aura ” of painting to the private
capitalist citizen as pillar of the new civil society. Photographic portraiture
could make visible, no longer the social prestige-value that attached to the
private bourgeois individual in its public role. This was just a brief way
station, because the semblance was already migrating again, thanks in large
part to the new traffi c in images photography made possible, into the
magic of the marketed commodity object (Benjamin 1999a, 2003). What
is the ghostly force of Marx ’ s “ commodity fetishism ” if not a semblance
of life lived through consumer artifacts? There is still a kind of aura to it:
a kind of personal capitalist prestige-value that rubs off on the purchasing
privatized individual, down to the most banal details of its everyday life.
The aura of the life banal. The art of cool. Or in a more mainstream vein,
lifestyle marketing.
But there is always a residue of semblant potential left after any and all
of its captures. Semblant potential is singularly, generically inexhaustible.
The Thinking-Feeling of What Happens 57
The residual force of the photographic semblance is what Roland Barthes
called the “ punctum, ” which he describes in terms of an uncanny sensa-
tion of the lived quality of a perished life surviving that life (Barthes 1988).
The punctum for Barthes is an affective force that makes the photo breathe
with a feeling of life, a life, in all the singularity of its having had no choice
but to follow the generic life path toward death in its own unique and
unreproducible way. It ’ s not about the content of the life per se or about
psychological associations that a memento of it might arouse in the
observer, it ’ s not really even about grief. It ’ s about the affective commotion
of a direct, immediate, uncanny thinking-feeling of the dynamic quality
of a life no more. The punctum is the appearance through the photo of
an affective afterlife. It is the strike of a life as a force, beyond an actual
life, In other words, as abstracted from it, as a real but abstract force of
life-likeness.
The point is that art is in inventive continuity with natural perception.
Every art object works by tapping into a certain aspect of “ natural ” percep-
tion in order to reabstract it, so that some actual potentials that were there
are suspended while others that tended not to appear before, or even had
never appeared before, are brought out. The new potentials can be captured
and reframed, and even given functions, political, social, personal, or eco-
nomic. They can also escape capture — in fact there is always a residue that
does — in which case they appear as political, social, personal, or economic
resistance to whatever external fi nalities and functional reframings hold
sway (even death). The point here is that none of this is about a tricking
of perception. It ’ s about a continuing expression of its evolving potentials.
Art isn ’ t about “ illusion. ” That ’ s not what “ semblance ” means (although
Langer herself uses the terms interchangeably). Art is about constructing
arti facts — crafted facts of experience. The fact of the matter is that experi-
ential potentials are brought to evolutionary expression.
Perspective painting makes the spatial 3D quality of experience into
a purely visual matter of fact. In aesthetic philosophy, in Alois Riegl
and Wilhelm Worringer, the word “ haptic ” doesn ’ t mean touch. It refers
to touch as it appears virtually in vision — touch as it can only be seen .
Any practice of abstraction operates on all the senses at the same time,
virtualizing some in order to heighten others with the abstract force of
what then doesn ’ t actually appear. Experience is a continuum. All its
dimensions are always all there, only differently abstracted, in different
58 Chapter 2
actual-virtual confi gurations, expressing different distributions of poten-
tials. The actual-virtual confi guration itself always appears, in the form of
an experiential quality or “ likeness ” — objectness for “ natural perception, ”
an objective spaciness without actual objects for perspective painting, a
certain animation without actual life for decorative motif, and after actual
life for photography, at least of a certain kind at a certain stage of its cul-
tural history.
V2 If a semblance can be given a function, doesn ’ t that contradict its
“ autonomy ” ? What you ’ ve just said about the political function of perspec-
tive painting, for example, seems to corroborate the critiques of vision I
mentioned.
BM I ’ m not at all denying that perceptual artifacts lend themselves to
regimes of power, or envelop in themselves power potentials as well as
powers of resistance. What I ’ m saying is that they can do this because of
their autonomy, as an effect of it. I mentioned before that a semblance in
itself is a kind of “ living-in ” of potential, in the sense of holding life poten-
tial in immanence — wholly immanent to the semblance ’ s appearance. How
can a framed picture presenting a fragment of a scene hold a wholeness of
potential in it? By including what doesn ’ t actually appear, but that is nec-
essarily involved in the thinking-feeling of what does. A semblance is a
form of inclusion of what exceeds the artifact ’ s actuality. That ’ s Leibniz ’ s
monadic principle. Leibniz ’ s monads are not “ closed ” in the sense that
they are limited. They ’ re closed because they ’ re saturated, because they
hold within themselves their own infi nity. There ’ s just no room for any
more. They have their own “ moreness, ” in how they potentially continue,
how they self-distance, stretch themselves further than they presently go.
A monad is the semblance of a world . It is the worldly way in which, in
Whitehead ’ s words, each thing “ essentially involves its own connection to
the universe of other things . . . an infi nitude of alternative potentialities ”
(Whitehead 1968, 66). The monadism of a semblance is the way a thing
includes its outside in itself. The semblance is a little absolute of “ immedi-
ately given relation, ” as James puts it (James 1996b, 280). The great abso-
lute is the Hegelian totality of self-sameness that “ includes its own other ”
(1996b, 271) in its all-encompassing self-identity. In contrast, the little
absolute includes its own other in such a way that its identity “ telescopes
and diffuses into other reals ” (1996b, 272). It includes its own others
The Thinking-Feeling of What Happens 59
dispositionally, “ doubling monadology with a nomadology ” (Deleuze
1993, 137, translation modifi ed). The little absolute is not so much closed
as it is virtually in-folding and out-folding. This makes it a fragmentary
totality, because it folds from its own singular perspective, and the “ others ”
that it includes reciprocally include it, equally telescoped and diffused into
their singular worldy perspectives. The telescopings and diffusings don ’ t
overlap perfectly. They don ’ t fi t harmoniously together. They are incom-
mensurably mutually including. Each semblance is a world-fragment
including all the others from its own perspective. This makes the universe
they reciprocally compose a co-construct organized according to what
Guattari calls a principle of “ transmonadism ” (Guattari, 1995, 112-116).
Benjamin, in his own transmonadic vocabulary, says that the semblance
is a “ smallest totality ” (Benjamin 1996c, 225). An artwork, understood in
terms of its semblance, is a whole relational world, in the transmonadic
sense of being a “ little absolute ” dispositionally expressing “ an infi nitude
of alternative potentialities. ”
There is always a specifi c device or mechanism that is integral to the
structuring of the artwork that operates the transmonadic inclusion and
makes the artifact world-like in its own unique way. In Barthes ’ s account
of photography, the mechanism is the punctum and its way of including
in the portrait the dynamic wholeness of a life-world including its own
afterlife. In perspective painting, it ’ s the vanishing point.
The vanishing point is how the scene ’ s continuing into its own distance
appears. What is in the distance doesn ’ t appear. The vanishing point is not
more content. It is where the content of the scene fades out into the dis-
tance. The distance itself appears, through the fading. But the fading-out
doesn ’ t even have to be painted in. It can be included in the painting
without actually being painted, through the way the painting projects the
eye into an abstract distance. The distance doesn ’ t have to be painted,
because it can be lived, by the eyes. This is achieved in perspective tech-
nique by a compositional principle that follows rules of geometric projec-
tion. The composition of the painting is guided by a geometry of parallel
lines projecting infi nitely toward the vanishing point, in whose virtual
distance they appear to converge. This produces a virtual visual movement,
not unlike the movement I described in decorative motif. Except in this
case, the movement doesn ’ t appear for itself, it appears for the geometric
order that produced it. It doesn ’ t take off in its own right, it falls back into
60 Chapter 2
its abstract cause. What we see is not so much the movement. Through
the virtual visual movement, we see the scene with a feeling of the regular-
ity of its geometry. We can ’ t see the artwork ’ s content without thinking-
feeling its spatial order . Without producing it for our own experience of
the scene. Perspective painting spatializes the visual movement it creates
in order to produce a perceived order. The harmony and regularity of this
perceived spatial order continues infi nitely into the distance at the virtual
center of the vanishing point. But it also radiates. It circles back from the
virtual center, around to the outside of the frame. The scene is centered
on the infi nity of its spatial order, and is also fringed by it. It is immersed
in it. The artwork is actually bounded by the frame, but its scene is virtu-
ally unlimited. It ’ s the semblance of a world, bounded and unlimited. The
semblance is also in a sense closed, but not spatially. It closes the world ’ s
constitutive variety on principle: the principle of a single, infi nite order of
harmony and regularity. 3
The only sense in which a semblance is an “ illusion ” is when, as in this
case, the “ immediately given relation ” it expresses fi nds principled closure
in an unlimited harmony of order — in spite of the partiality and incom-
mensurability betokened by its individual framing. Benjamin (1996b, 283)
calls a semblance that contrives to make a universal harmonic order effec-
tively appear a “ beautiful semblance. ” A beautiful semblance is one pur-
porting to offer a transparent window onto a great absolute. A beautiful
semblance “ quivers ” with the tension of this pretention to greatnesss. The
tension is such that the moment its harmony is “ disrupted ” or “ inter-
rupted, ” it “ shatters ” into fragments. It then shows itself to have been all
along but a “ smallest totality ” — like each of its infi nitely included other-
worlds whose status as real alternate potentialities has been effectively
“ veiled ” by the apparent harmony of its virtually unlimited order (Benja-
min 1996c, 224 – 225; Benjamin 2002, 137).
Pragmatically, the individual framing of the painting allows it, and its
virtually unlimited order, to be inserted inside another frame. The painting
is hung on the wall of the royal court. As a world-fragment in-spite-of-itself,
it has no actual connection to this other world of the court. After all, its
geometric order of harmonious connection is virtual, a beautiful sem-
blance. But its insertion into the larger frame of the royal court makes its
principle of universal order appear within that frame as well. Not uncoin-
cidentally, the absolute monarchy aspires on its own behalf to just this
The Thinking-Feeling of What Happens 61
principle of an infi nitely radiating harmonious order, as regular and uni-
versal as geometry. Like painting, like realm. The all-seeing eye of the
absolute monarch is the vanishing point of the kingdom. It is the abstract
(god-like) cause of the ordered space of the realm, infi nite by rights. The
king ’ s body is the preeminent body whose virtual movements constitute
the macro-order of the glorious whole of the realm. The space of the paint-
ing and the space of the realm are analogs of each other. They don ’ t
connect in any direct way. They don ’ t actually connect. There is an
unbridgeable reality-gap between them. They are actually incommensu-
rable. One is a painting, the other a realm. They have different qualitative
natures, operate at different scales, have different contents and compo-
nents, and are put together differently. Actually, they are in a relation of
nonrelation . Yet they produce, each in its own way, a semblance of the same
order. Where they do overlap is at their virtual centers — their vanishing
points coincide. The vanishing point only has an abstract or formal exis-
tence, because what it contains never appears. It ’ s the form in which what
doesn ’ t actually appear appears. Except it isn ’ t even actually a form, it ’ s a
form of abstraction, an abstract fading away, the appearing of a disappear-
ing into the distance that folds the distance in, most harmoniously. The
painting and the court enact the same form of abstraction, across their
differences in scale, content, and components. They are different revolving
around the same virtual center, which is immanent to both of them, the
vanishing point where they each live themselves in. They coincide purely
abstractly, at the very point at which they are immanent to themselves .
Remember that the vanishing point makes the perspectival artwork self-
embracing as a whole. This makes it the semblance of a harmonious world,
even though the scene it contains is actually partial. It is a self-embracing
harmonious whole because the spatial ordering doesn ’ t fade out with the
actually perceptible contents. Quite the reverse, the fading-out of the
content makes the order come back around, to complete a circuit. The
spatial order wraps back around to surround the fringes of the frame, giving
a defi nite present a boundary to the infi nity it holds. This offsets the infi n-
ity of the world of the painting from its immediate surroundings. As a
result, it enjoys a self-embracing autonomy from what ’ s actually around
it. The same goes for the kingdom: it is an infi nitely self-embracing order
that is nevertheless offset from other kingdoms around it, and from other
political formations (even if they share the same actual territory, as with
62 Chapter 2
the budding bourgeoisie that was already beginning to bubble up, in what
Marx called the “ pores ” of soon-to-be ancien r é gime — in the gaps created
by its self-distancing).
The frame that the royal court gives itself is sovereignty. Since sover-
eignty ’ s order is in principle unlimited, the monarchy is always trying to
actually live-up to the principle it virtually lives-in. It tries to expand its
boundaries to actually include as much space as possible, to translate
virtual expansiveness into actual expansion. Translated into expansionism,
into an actual political dynamic, the sovereign framing turns imperialist.
If the expansion is interrupted, so that sovereignty is forced to fall back
within a particular territorial frame, then the god-like pretension to uni-
versal order turns totalitarian. A whole political ecology that will come to
play itself out historically in a range of actually existing State formations
turns out to have been virtually included in the immediately given rela-
tion-of-nonrelation absolutely centering each successive framing.
Perspective painting includes in its frame the same potential as gets
played out in the absolutist empire. Nevertheless, there is nothing in the
painting that makes a destiny of empire or totalitarianism. The very same
dynamic can, and later did, scale down to the scale of the human body,
which then appeared as what has been critiqued in political philosophy
as the “ legislating subject. ” This is the individual as sovereign of himself,
king in the castle of his own body — and pillar of bourgeois democracy, as
a kind of democratic absolutism. We see continuations of this in the
concept of “ sacred ” human rights and “ inalienable ” personal freedom. All
of this was recognized in a way by the critique of “ ocularcentrism, ” which
was particularly strong in the 1980s, when sovereign-individual freedoms
started to be chipped away at by an emergent neoconservatism, centrally
concerned with a latter-day State sovereignty of its own singular brand
(Massumi 2009). Every monadic framing contains many destinies, trans-
monadically, if only in spite of itself.
I said awhile back that it is no accident that perspective painting
emerged at the time the absolute monarchy was taking shape. Well, it was
an accident, an historical accident, even though in another way they were
made for each other. You can ’ t say that one actually caused the other. Each
has its own formation. They may have been in symbiosis for awhile and
mutually reinforced each other, but that was the result of an encounter. It
wasn ’ t a destiny. There is no reason why it should have happened. It could
The Thinking-Feeling of What Happens 63
very well not have happened, even with all the necessary conditions in
place, even with the potential readily available. That it happened was an
event, an encounter, an accident. That ’ s precisely what makes it historical.
But it was an accident that was sustained . Their entering into cooperation
was an accident and an achievement. Hard work and much technique went
into sustaining the encounter, into holding them together: a system of
court patronage of artists, an educating of court society and the larger
society, a cultivating of taste, an adaptation of architecture to house the
artworks implicated in the encounter (the Louvre being the case in point),
new institutions (to give another example from France, the Academy).
They were not so much connected to each other as they entered into the
same zone of operative proximity capable of holding them together ana-
logically, and of giving that holding-together a function. They “ quivered ”
together in the same transmonadic fi eld.
The reason they were made for each other is that sharing the same
principle of order put them intensely into “ resonance, ” as Deleuze and
Guattari would put it. They connected abstractly, in analog offset, at the
virtual center where their immanence to themselves appeared. The virtual
center is like a black hole. It sucks everything in, but still emanates a certain
energy. For example, the vanishing point in painting takes the whole scene
in. But across the variations in painted content, it can also leak something
back out. Not a thing, but an abstract quality.
Landscape painting, repeated and varied, gave the perspectival spatial
order an ethos . It gave the purely geometric ordering of perspective space
an inhabited quality. The semblance came to be virtual home to a people.
An inhabited quality is just what a realm wants, if it is going to try to unite
its people and not only try to expand its territory. It ’ s an attractive quality
for a kingdom, for reasons all its own. The imperial monarchy was predis-
posed to take that same quality into itself, to make it its own, to interpret
it, in the sense of producing its own effective analog of it, in its own politi-
cal world. As was totalitarianism, differently. And bourgeois democracy,
differently again. There was no necessary causal connection in any usual
sense of the word between perspective painting and the imperial monar-
chy. There was more an affective impetus — an autonomous “ want ” in the
kingdom — that happened to echo with a qualitative spin-off effect of
painting practice. The want was not an expression of a lack, but rather of
the empire ’ s striving or tending to sustain and expand its world-saturation.
64 Chapter 2
It was an expression of its dynamic fullness with itself. It ’ s what Spinoza
would call “ conatus. ” The formations communicated with each other
through the abstract coupling of an affect with an effect, which because
of its abstract qualitative nature could not be touched by any actually
present cause. Simondon calls the kind of analog contagion between dif-
ferent but resonating formations of which this an example transduction in
order to distinguish it from linear causality, with its ban on action at a
distance and its presumption of actual, local, part-to-part connection
(Simondon 2005, 31 – 33, 107 – 110 and passim).
Formations communicate only immanently , at the points where they
live themselves in, or at their self-embracing fringes. They only virtually
relate. All relation is virtual. Earlier, when I was talking about how vision
related to the other senses, I ended up having to say that vision is virtual.
It is only because relation is virtual that there is any freedom or creativity
in the world. If formations were in actual causal connection, how they
effectively connect would be completely determined. They might interact ,
but they would not creatively relate. There would be no gap in the chain
of connection for anything new to emerge from and pass contagiously
across. There ’ d be no margin of creative indeterminacy. No wriggle room.
Or to borrow Whitehead ’ s expression, there ’ d be no “ elbow room ” in the
world (Whitehead 1967a, 195). The idea that all connection and commu-
nication is immanent, that there is no actual relation, is at the heart of
Whitehead ’ s philosophy. He calls it the “ contemporary independence of
actual occasions ” (Whitehead 1967a, 195 – 199). He says that all formations
cohabiting the present are completely autonomous in relation to each
other. They are absolute in that sense. Pure monadic appearances (1967a,
177). Semblances. World-fragments. Drops of experience. Little absolutes.
Each begins at a nonconscious, micro-experiential level. At this incipient
level, the coming experience is affectively potentialized to unfold. It unfolds,
singularly, in its “ sheer individuality ” (1967a, 177), from an immanent
affective relation to other occasions. Drops of experience overlap in affect.
An example he gives is anger (1967a, 183 – 184).
How, he asks, does an angry person know he ’ s angry the next moment,
even if it ’ s just a half-second later? He isn ’ t refl ecting, he doesn ’ t conclude
that he ’ s angry. He just is, still. He fi nds himself still in his anger. The anger
is the in-ness of that moment, as it was the in-ness of the preceding
The Thinking-Feeling of What Happens 65
moment, and the two moments connect and communicate by overlapping
in it. The affective tonality of anger is not the content of the moments.
It ’ s their shared in-ness, their mutual immanence. The angry content is
the actual angry words and gestures that repeat and vary from one moment
to the next. The anger was the qualitative vanishing point of the last
moment, the angriness it trailed out in, and in which the next moment
naturally found itself, with no perceptible transition. It ’ s like an experien-
tial dissolve. There ’ s no determinate transition in a dissolve, just a continu-
ous fading-out overlapping with a continuous fading-in. The point at
which the changeover occurs is imperceptible by nature. It is purely
abstract. But it must have happened. We know it did, because even if it
wasn ’ t perceived, it was unmistakably felt. Known-felt, thought-felt. It ’ s a
virtual affective event. The thought-felt continuity of the anger is the
virtual event of an unperceived background continuity leading from one
moment (or occasion) to the next. The anger doesn ’ t determine what
happens one-to-one, specifi c cause to linear effect. This “ affective tone ”
(Whitehead 1967a, 176) is not a cause in that sense. It ’ s a carry-over. What
it does is carry-across the qualitative nature of what happens. It gives an
abstract, purely qualitative background continuity to the two moments.
The actual words spoken may skip. To the extent that they ’ re angry words,
it ’ s almost assured that they will, they won ’ t logically connect from one
moment to the next. That ’ s in the nature of angry words. The angry ges-
tures will also be staccato. That ’ s also their nature. It ’ s their defi ning
quality. What is actually said and done from one moment to the next is
discontinuous by nature. But something continues, thought-felt across
the gaps. In Whitehead ’ s words, it ’ s a “ nonsensuous perception, ” a virtual
perception of “ the immediate past as surviving to be again lived through
in the present ” (Whitehead 1967a, 182). Every situation, whatever its lived
tonality, is sundered by these nonsensuously lived micro-intervals fi lled
only qualitatively and abstractly by affect. Like the vanishing point, they
wrap back around to surround. What Whitehead calls affective tonality is
something we fi nd ourselves in, rather than fi nding in ourselves. An
embracing atmosphere that is also at the very heart of what happens
because it qualifi es the overall feel. Affective tonality is what we normally
call a “ mood ” (Whitehead 1967a, 246). As Gilbert Ryle says, moods are the
weather patterns of our experience. They ’ re not actual contents of it (Ryle
66 Chapter 2
1949, 83, 96, 99). The contents are precipitation. A rain of words and
gestures in the micro-climate that is life at this moment, coming in drops.
The discontinuity inevitably gets smoothed over. The attending-to affor-
dance that I talked about earlier is one way it gets smoothed over. Use-
oriented or behavioral focus on the fl ow of action translates the immanent
overlap of experiences into an external relay from one action to the next.
It translates the qualitative continuity of affect at the incipient micro-
experiential level onto the conscious macro-level of objective interaction.
Immanent relation is overlaid by the appearance of an actual connection.
This occurs on an instrumental level forgetful of the nonsensuous percep-
tion at the heart of all experience. The virtual continuity in the gaps is
arced over by what purports to be an actual continuity across the gaps. The
monadic discontinuity between drops of experience is bridged over by a
sense of interactivity that functionally passes over it, which is to say, passes
it over.
Narrative is another powerful device by which the actual discontinuity
between drops of experience is passed over. Interactivity involves a func-
tional macro-continuity. Narrative produces a verbal meta-continuity. The
angry words will be explained, justifi ed, rationaIized, excused, given cause
and made understandable, smoothed over. It ’ s fi ctional. And it ’ s palliative.
It takes the edge off. It glosses things over after the fact. It ’ s “ meta ” in the
etymological sense of “ after. ” It ’ s retrospective, operating on the level of
conscious revision. This can be going on on a parallel track in the moment,
like a revisory verbal echo of the perceptual d é j à vu of the semblance.
Narrative linguistically doubles experience ’ s perceptual doubling of itself,
and can do this with the same immediacy. A self-storied semblance. The
self-storying reframes the event for ready insertion in the larger operative
envelope of socially regulated discourse. This glossing makes sense of the
semblance.
Of course, this isn ’ t the only way in which language can function in
art. It has many nonnarrative modalities — the phatic and the performative
to mention just two — that operate in the immediacy of experience and can
be taken up with art. These modalities may underlie sensemaking, as the
phatic does. Or they undermine it. They may suspend it in order to cleave
it asunder — “ make language itself stutter, ” as Deleuze was fond of saying
(Deleuze 1997, 15, 107 – 114). Or like the performative, they may operate
within language in an asignifying manner, to make things happen
The Thinking-Feeling of What Happens 67
on other, nonlinguistic levels. These modalities may fuse together or
relay each other.
Without going further into the language question, the important point
for the moment is that Whitehead writes actual interaction out of “ reality, ”
which he identifi es with the “ real potentiality ” from which an experience
emerges (Whitehead 1967a, 179). He ’ s saying that in the fi nal analysis,
when you get into what really (virtually, immanently) happens, when
you ’ re thinking-feeling what is really (abstractly, nonsensuously) lived,
there is no such thing as interaction. It has no reality, because there is no
actual connection between things.
This requires adjusting the whole vocabulary we use to talk about “ inter-
activity. ” We have to translate that concept into relational terms, as I was
trying to do at the beginning of this conversation, so that when we say
“ interaction ” we ’ re saying “ immanent relation, ” with all the adjustments
that come along with that in the way we think about what things actually
are, what their action really is, and how they communicate. For one thing,
we shouldn ’ t say “ interaction ” without thinking-feeling discontinuity. We
will have to give the gaps between things, and from one moment to the
next, their vital, virtual due. It is in those gaps that the reality of the situ-
ation is to be found. If we gloss over them, we are missing the thinking-
feeling of what really happens. 4 We have to take a distance on the rhetoric
of connectivity that has been so dominant in the areas of new media and
new technology. We will have to treat connectivity as a narrative, a meta-
fi ctional revisionism. To call something fi ctional is not to say that it is
useless or unreal in the sense of being purely an illusion. “ In one sense, ”
Whitehead writes, “ everything is ‘ real, ’ according to its own category of
being . . . ‘ to be something ’ is to be discoverable as a factor in the analysis
of some actuality ” (1967a, 197). The macro-continuity of interactivity
shored up by the rhetoric of connectivity is indeed “ discoverable as a factor
in the analysis ” new media actualities. It is a functionally effective fi ction.
One of the things its functioning does is to pass over the full spectrum of
potential in the situations it organizes. It is not unreal in the sense that it
does nothing. It just does otherwise than appears. The point is that con-
nectivity and interactivity appear differently against the background
of their virtual, Whiteheadian reality of immanent, affective continuity.
(I should mention that Whitehead would not say “ virtual. ” He use the
terms “ pure potentiality ” where Deleuze would say “ virtual ” and “ real
68 Chapter 2
potentiality ” for the virtual as it makes ingress into an actual occasion. For
more on the way Deleuze charts his own vocabulary of virtuality, potential,
and possibility into Whitehead ’ s — which is too complex to do justice to
here — see 1993, 79 – 80.) 5
At any rate, there ’ s an ethics and a politics of creativity contained in
Whitehead ’ s notion of contemporary independence that I think are impor-
tant to explore. They lead in very different directions from the ethical and
political orientations we ’ ve inherited from that other notion of autonomy
native to our time, the idea of sovereign-individual freedom. That kind of
autonomy seems to be presupposed not only by liberalism, but by many
of the “ radical ” politics that interactive art often aligns itself with. The
main project of the aesthetic politics I ’ m talking about would be to rethink
autonomy in qualitatively relational terms. It would be an affective poli-
tics, more about seeding exploratory weather patterns than cultivating
their determinate contents, the particular ideas or behaviors that will be
performed.
V2 Can you make this a bit more concrete as regards interactive art? We ’ re
still essentially in painting and in the visual. Can you give an example
from interactive art?
BM OK, but give me a minute to work myself out of the vanishing point,
which has taken over a bit. As I was saying, classical fi gurative painting
employing perspective technique renders the abstract movement of per-
ception as a spatial order governed by a universal principle ensuring
harmony between perspectives. What shows-through the dynamic of this
perceptual event is a spatial order that is as harmonious as it is unlimited.
Its intimations of harmony seem to promise stability (although in the
historical playing out of its principle in political ecology, what it delivers
is far from it). The vitality affect of the perceptual event taking place is
settling, pacifying, “ civilizing. ” This is why it feels more “ concrete ” or
“ realistic ” than later painting that claims for itself the explicit label of
“ abstract ” art. In art, concrete and realistic mean appearing with the feeling
of a stable perceptual order that lends itself to analogue capture by larger
frames of social or political orders that promote stability as a conservative
value, even though they are incapable of delivering on it, given the reality
of the transmonadic “ quiver ” at the heart of every formation. Given the
virtual agitation tensing the “ chaosmic umbilicus ” of its affective core
The Thinking-Feeling of What Happens 69
(Guattari 1995, 112). Given the Benjaminian disruptions and interruptions
this lived-in tension, this lived intensity, immanently invites from outside,
in the way it includes within itself its own-others that inhabit it as infi nite
alternative potentialites. The point is, we should be wary of calls for a
return to the “ concrete. ”
Decorative motif, for its part, is in no way radical. But it also has less
potential for order-bound capture. That ’ s why decorative art is considered
fl uff. It doesn ’ t have that kind of potential because its motifs don ’ t exten-
sively spatialize, they don ’ t spin off an extensive order that continues
beyond the fringe, wraps back around, and strongly resonates with a politi-
cal ecology of potential. It restricts itself to producing a movement-effect
that is pretty much content to be how it is, where it is. Its effect is anodyne
because the vitality affect it produces takes off from patterns of line and
curve that in their actual form are fi gurative of determinate things likes
leaves and branches and fl owers. There is still a gentle uncanniness to the
effect, which consists in an animation of the inanimate support on which
the motif moves. But fl owers coming to a semblance of life on the lace of
a tea cozy are not the most disruptive or potentiating of things.
Abstract art, on the other hand, was and continues to be just the kind
of disruption that fi gurative art was always afraid of, in its quivering heart
of hearts. Abstract art is dissonant, dissensual, incommensurable. It ’ s eter-
nally popular to hate it. Even those who like it seem only to disagree about
it. We interpret it in combatively disparate ways that never seem to fi nd a
common ground of judgment. No semblance of a universal principle of
harmonious order here. The works punchily affi rm the fragmentary nature
of their worlding. They are interruptive in their own right, and proud
of it.
Paradoxically, abstract art is disruptive in a way that, from the point of
view of the quality of perceptual event that gets mobilized, places it in a
kinship with the decorative art it often belittles. It also produces out and
out movement-effect — and even takes that further. It is not disruptive,
interruptive, dissonant because it brings threatening things to a semblance
of life instead of anodyne ones. It is because it draws its experiential power
from suppressing the fi gurative element as much as possible. It makes felt
a dynamic, a vitality affect, that has no object. It ’ s not an animation of
anything. It ’ s a pure animateness, a vitality affect that comes from no thing
and nowhere in particular.
70 Chapter 2
For example, in color fi eld painting, the movement is dispersed across
the surface. It is an irreducibly global effect that detaches from the surface,
appearing to fl oat above or across the canvas, like its ghostly double. You ’ re
not seeing the work if you ’ re not seeing this lively immaterial double of
it. It has this effect as an expression of its immanent relationality. What is
being activated are certain relational dynamics of color — effects of simul-
taneous contrast and color complementarity, for example. These are rela-
tional dynamics immanent to vision, and productive of it. They are the
normally unperceived activity constitutive of vision itself. What is being
brought out is a perceptual energy that goes unseen even as it makes seeing
happen. This is art going back to the conditions of emergence of object-
perception, and bringing those conditions to visible expression. It ’ s the
production of a semblance of seeing itself, as it happens — a perception of
perception in the making. This brings out the self-referential dimension of
perception that I talked about earlier. It lives-vision-in in a totally different
way than perspective painting does, without the projective aspect. Rather
than projecting perception into an order of different dimensions from
those of vision (the three infi nitely extending dimensions of geometric
space), and rather than projecting these dimensions into an analogical
symbiosis with other orders (such a sovereignty), it brings out the dimen-
sions proper to vision as such — dimensions that only live in vision. Touch
can also do lines. Empire can also be expansive and extend its order all
around. Color is something only vision can do. It brings these properly
visual dimensions out as it lives them in. It brings them out and makes
them fl oat, in their own optical take-off effect. There ’ s a tension between
a sinking into the dynamic center of vision, from which it emerges, and a
fl oating off from the surface of emergence. The painting visibly quivers.
The effect can be a powerful visual feeling, a feeling of seeing sight caught
in its own intensive act. The thinking-feeling of vision as it happens. This
appearing for itself of an immanent activity, intensely going nowhere, is
dizzying. 6 Abstract art dizzies vision, not unlike the way Deleuze says
modern literature stutters language. It dizzies vision by returning it to its
movement-potential while refusing to give that potential an actual outlet
feeding it into other existing formations. It strives not to participate in
political ecology in any conventional, harmoniously symbiotic way. Of
course, this in itself is a political act of a certain kind. The slogan “ art for
art ’ s sake ” should be understood in this light, as an affi rmation of the
The Thinking-Feeling of What Happens 71
autonomy of art in the sense discussed it earlier: not beholden to external
fi nalities, bootstrapping itself on its own in-dwelt tendencies.
People often talk about the movement-feeling produced in art as
“ haptic ” feeling (Marks 2002). I don ’ t agree. It ’ s overgeneralizing. It ’ s not
paying suffi cient attention to the composition of the experience. The sup-
pression of the object-like in practices of abstraction like color fi eld paint-
ing also suppresses the uptake of tactility into vision. The other sense that
virtually appears in dynamic visual form is kinesthesia, the feeling of
movement. 7 Abstract art recomposes the senses. It composes perception
with a different experiential palette than either perspective painting or
decorative art, which, as I said earlier, takes up a certain tactility in its
movement-effect. Here, there is a purely optical kinesthesia that can only
be seen, and only that. Athough on the other hand, texture alone is
enough to retain a touch of objectness. As we also saw earlier, where one
modality of perception is present, so are all the rest . . . it ’ s a question of
modes of composition and degrees of virtuality. The question has to be
reexamined in each case to evaluate the nature of the recomposition. We
should be careful not to generalize, but rather always reevaluate, attuned
to the singularity of the work. It is all too easy to settle on a quick half
answer, like saying that the haptic is about touch taking priority over
vision. The haptic is about touch as only vision can make it appear, just
like color fi eld painting is about doing kinesthesia as only vision can.
Texture is an example of haptic vision: you immediately see how it feels.
The perceptual self-referentiality of abstract painting as a thinking-
feeling of vision-as-it-happens makes it, in itself, proudly useless. So what
kind of aesthetic politics can come out of it? Is there any way that it can
come out of itself, in resonance with other relational dynamics?
I think of the work of Robert Irwin as showing a way. His work has
always been concerned with staging what he himself calls the perception
of perception. In the early period, he practiced abstract art that created
subtle, whole-fi eld movement from arrays of dots (Weschler 1982, 85 – 97).
As in all his work, the effect takes time to set in, but when it does it is
absolutely scintillating. It ’ s less an out and out activity of vision than it is
an activation of it. It ’ s like vision vibrates with its own potential. Irwin then
moved into a more sculptural practice involving disks mounted on walls
but lit in a way that their three-dimensionality disappears into a semblance
of surface that retains a barely perceptible but extremely powerful, inwardly
72 Chapter 2
activated feeling of depth (Weschler 1982, 98 – 109). More a depth-likeness
than a depth per se. He was making the third spatial dimension rise to the
surface and insist on its visuality, in a kind of becoming-painting of
sculpture.
He then moved into installation. He moved off the wall into 3D space
itself, but also out of the gallery, into architectural or even urban spaces
(Weschler 1982, 110 – 114, 147 – 154, 168 – 175, 182 – 203). People normally
call this kind of art “ spatial ” because of that. They think of it as more
“ concrete, ” more “ real, ” than abstract painting and other gallery practices.
It ’ s not at all more concrete. It ’ s actually another practice of high abstrac-
tion. It ’ s not more real, it ’ s differently real. That ’ s why it ’ s powerful as art.
I have reservations about calling Irwin ’ s installation work spatial art. He
moved into inhabited space in order to make it become other, as he had
done with sculpture. It was what Deleuze would call a “ counteractualiza-
tion ” of spaces of inhabitation.
What Irwin made inhabited space become is a living event . He carefully,
minutely, obsessively prepares the conditions of perception so that an
activation event takes off from them. The whole space is doubled by a
perceptual activation or vibration effect, like the one he achieved with the
dot paintings and disk works. But this time, it ’ s immersive. It ’ s not immer-
sive in a 3D way. It ’ s like a diaphanous surface that ’ s everywhere and
nowhere at the same time, a dimensionless semblance of lived space.
Dimensionless but somehow totally space-fi lling, saturating every atom.
The effect is slow to come, a lot of people don ’ t have the patience to let
it come. When you do let it come, it takes over your whole being. You
have an immersive thinking-feeling of what it ’ s like to be alive in inhabited
space, and only what that ’ s like. It ’ s a perception of the perception of lived
space. And you ’ re all in that perception, every thought, every movement,
every shadow, every sound, each of them modulating the others, in imme-
diate vibrational relation, in resonance. The resonance is all-embracing.
Relationally self-framing. In a way that is only for the moment, uniquely
taking off from and fl oating in that space. It ’ s monadic. A world of percep-
tion unto itself. A self-embracing micro-climate of experience.
This is not interactive art. There is no interaction. You have to stop acting
for the perceptual event to happen. It then wells up of its own volition.
It takes you. You ’ re in it. It ’ s not in you. You live it in, rather than
living it out. You don ’ t go anywhere with it. It stays where it happened,
The Thinking-Feeling of What Happens 73
as its own event. It ’ s an intensive experience, rather than an extension of
it. This is an example of relational art that suspends all interaction.
When I said that what interactive art can do is take a situation as its
“ object, ” that it could live up to its potential by then cleaving the interac-
tions it situated asunder, I meant something like this, but done with and
through interactions. Not suspending them altogether, but opening micro-
intervals in them, so that there is a rhythm of departure and return
between nonsensuous perception of affective continuity on the one hand,
and on the other hand actually emergent drops of narrativizable experi-
ence precipitating determinate words and instrumentalizable experience
precipitating gestures. When I say this, I ’ m not endorsing Nicolas Bourri-
aud ’ s way of talking about relational art. From my perspective, his “ rela-
tional ” remains too wed to notions of interaction understood in terms of
mediated intersubjective exchange. I ’ m talking about im mediation, imme-
diately lived relation (chapter 4).
I ’ m not trying to set up Irwin as a model either. I ’ m saying that his
installation work moves to a non-interactive relational limit of art experi-
ence, and that interactive art can take that movement up in itself. I ’ m
saying that Irwin ’ s installation work is at an experiential limit or pole that
can itself be put into resonance with another pole, at which experience
has taken a certain distance on itself. The fi rst pole is the living-in of
relation, the second its living-out. Relation out-lived is subordinated to
recognized makings-sense, the conduct of outwardly meaningful acts,
action-reaction, instrumentation, function. Or if not so baldly to instru-
mentation, then still to mediation. And if not prosaically to function, then
to intersubjective exchange mediated by instrumentation. The poles,
however, can be played off each other , or play with each other, so that the
work produces a lived quality all its own, doubles itself aesthetically in a
semblance of itself, and at the same time actually does or tells something
specifi c. The poles are not necessarily mutually exclusive. In fact, they
always actually come together to some degree. Even in the most intensely
lived-in art practice, there is a minimum of recognition, making-sense,
instrumentation, and function necessary to enable the work to take off. A
modicum of living-out is necessary for the work to occur.
Thought of in this way, art practice is a technique of composing poten-
tials of existence, inventing experiential styles, coaxing new forms of life
to emerge across polar differentials. Art is inventive, literally creative of
74 Chapter 2
vitality affect. I said earlier it was a technique of existence, and I do mean
“ technique. ” To achieve any affective-effective composition requires the
same kind of care, minute attention to detail, and obsessive experimenta-
tion in how the situation is set up or framed as Irwin is famous for. In
Irwin ’ s case, the framing is nonobjective. It ’ s more a performance envelope
than an objective frame. A dynamic or operative frame.
The poles of relation lived-in and lived-out cut across every experiential
distinction we can make. Take the senses. Each sense constitutes a pole of
experience in its own right. We can separate them out, recognizing when
we are having a predominant experience of seeing rather than touching,
for example, and conducting meaningful functions accordingly. We can
also consciously reconnect them across their separation, as when we look
at a tool and think about the best way of taking into our hand for our use.
This is the sense-equivalent of interaction. It is sense-experience at the
pole, or limit, at which it is lived-out interactively. Toward the beginning
I talked about what in perception studies is called cross-modal transfer. The
problem for using that concept as it fi gures in perception studies for under-
standing art practices as techniques of existence is that the distinction
between sense interaction and sensed relation is not made. The way in
which the senses are lived-in is not taken into account. I used the word
“ fusion ” to talk about the event of sense-relation. I said an object was a
cross-modal fusion. The idea was that potential touches and kinesthesias
normally (habitually) built into the situation inhabit the event of vision.
Feeling between these modes, we really, immediately see unseen aspects of
the object ’ s presence in that situation. The point I did not bring out into
relief enough is that in the immediacy of that between of different senses,
the experience is not in one sense mode or another. It is not, strictly speak-
ing, cross-modal. It is amodal . The relational pole of sense experience is
amodal (Massumi 2002, 169 – 171). Lived abstraction, lived in-most, is an
immediacy of amodal living.
As art plays between the poles of interaction and relation, so do the
senses. Experience is always approaching one of its limits. It is always on
the way to separating them out so they can be usefully cross-connected,
or fusing them together in amodal immediacy to each other. As experience
approaches either limit, it automatically toggles to the other. It is all good
and well for the senses to function. But if they want to potentialize , they
have to fuse. Every time experience separates itself out, depolarizes itself,
The Thinking-Feeling of What Happens 75
it has to repolarize, in order to recharge itself with potential. There is a
necessary return to the fusional pole doubling every separate-sense experi-
ence, and every cross-modal connection. This eternal return of experiential
fusion habitually passes unnoticed. It is nonconscious. Art, practiced as
Irwin practices it, as a technique of existence dedicated to the perception
of perception, can nevertheless make it felt, in effect. Or make it “ seen. ”
It make felt the play between the relational limits of experience. By doing
this, it can learn techniques for recharging itself. The reason for integrating
the kinds of distinctions I ’ ve been making here into our thinking about
art and into the making of art is to renew and intensify its potential.
The toggling back to the fusional-relational pole is most intensely felt
a when the separating-out of the sense modes is taken to an extreme. This
is when a sense is made to do only what it can do. At that limit of what it
can do, its relational conditions of emergence appear, as if experience
returned through a wormhole to the other end of its universe in no time
at all. Fusion effects spark, but so much in no-time-at-all that the vitality
affect, the most outstanding lived quality of the experiential event, is in
another sense mode, lived-out the other side of the wormhole. Inciden-
tally, it is in the wormhole that James ’ s “ pure experience ” resides.
This is what I was talking about with kinesthesic and haptic vision: how
they are pure optical appearances of other-sense qualities of life. What ’ s
potentially instructive for art is more how the senses inhabit each other,
even at the acme of their separation, than any putative domination of one
by the other. The senses are always also taking each other up, coming into
and out of each other in one way or another, worming their way around
(Massumi 2002, 144 – 176). They never function alone. What we call the
ocularcentric “ domination ” of vision over the other senses is in fact a
highly functionalized and systematized cross-modal connection between
vision and touch. Look forth and grasp, and have toolful dominion over
the earth . . . the real issue is not so much the supposed domination
of vision, it ’ s the excessive instrumentalization of its interaction with
tactility. “ Ocularcentrism ” is a certain interacto-centrism, technoscientifi -
cally enhanced.
The senses only ever function together, fusionally, in differential con-
trast and coming-together. Although it is fair to call each sense a contrast-
ing pole, it goes further to think in terms of contrasting wormhole poles
of amodal fusion. At the extreme of every sense ’ s separating-out, it reaches
76 Chapter 2
an immanent limit where it fl ips into an immediate relation with other-
sense experience. At the limit, the sense-poles of experience are in constant
virtual contact. They are always already in resonance, aquiver together at
an analogical distance from each other that makes a destiny of their co-
variation as part of the same ecology of experience. The same thing applies
for stable spatial ordering and disruptive eventness. Intensity of experience
and extension of it. Perception and action. Object perception and sem-
blance. Objective perception and perception of perception. Self-referencing
and function. Immanent relation (of nonrelation) and extrinsic relation
(connective interaction). Actual (sensuous) form and nonsensuous (amodal)
perception. Vision and narrative revision. Site-specifi city and disposition.
Monadology and nomadology. These are not dualities. They are polarities,
dynamic orientations in an abstract qualitative map of potential experi-
ence. The map is always multi-polar. All of these contrasting modes virtu-
ally map each other, ripple into each other, canceling each other out or
combining and amplifying, cresting and troughing, for calm and for tur-
bulence, for continuing and turning back in, for immanence and out-
living. Any way it goes, we always live at a unique crossroads of them.
Each moment is carried by the current of a singular-generic fusion of all
of them, mutually foregrounded or backgrounded, active to varying inten-
sity in the formative stir of the fi eld of emergence of experience.
What I ’ m saying is that when an art practice carefully sets itself up, lays
down the constraints that enable its own signature operation, it is selec-
tively activating these poles, to varying degrees, and to different stand-out
effect. In the vocabulary of the next chapter, when it composes itself in
this way, art is “ diagramming ” livable relation. Each setup, each situational
framing, will orient what happens more toward one end or the other of
given polarities. It might, for example, bring narrativity out more than the
affective in-whichness, or try to do both equally, superimposing them on
each other or oscillating between them. Or it might favor instrumental
interactivity more than making the relationalities conditioning it appear.
It may fuse vision with tactility, or with kinesthesia, or spin one of them
off from vision at vision ’ s own immanent limit. Or it might be forcefully
disruptive, and make felt jolting disjunctions between sense modes, for
example between sound and sight. It might spatialize more than eventuate.
It might tend to root in the site-specifi c, or fan out into a distributed
The Thinking-Feeling of What Happens 77
network. The possibilities are as infi nite as existence. Art is a literal com-
posing of existential potentials. Life design.
The crux is in the technical laying down of operative parameters. In the
design of the performance envelope, or the enabling operative contraints
(Manning and Massumi, forthcoming b). If “ anything goes, ” it ’ s not art.
Because if anything can go, it does — the aesthetic effect just goes away,
dissipates. There is no dynamic form. Not even a semblance of a semblance
appears. This was a problem facing installation art, which struggled with
the temptation to pile everything in. If you do that, what you end up
with is . . . a pile, a mess. It ’ s a problem again with interactive art, because
with digital technology you can connect anything to anything else. When
you leave the connective potential too open, you end up with the digital
equivalent of a mess. On the other hand, when you close it down too
much, you make it a game.
Deleuze used to say that life is an art of dosages. And the art of dosing
life with creative potential is one of creative subtraction (Deleuze and
Guattari 1987, 6, 21, 98 – 99). That goes for art as a whole, which as we ’ ve
seen is not separate from life even when it carefully appears to be. You
have to strategically subtract to activate an autonomous limit or fuse for
a situation. And you have to selectively fuse to sunder.
V2 Still no example.
BM OK. One thing that ’ s happening more and more in interactive art is
a fusing of vision with movement. This is operating at the same nexus
between visual dynamics and kinesthesia as Irwin ’ s relational art does, but
in a very different way because there is in fact interaction. An example I
saw a couple of years ago was at a work-in-progress session at Sha Xin Wei ’ s
Topological Media Lab, which works on responsive environment design.
One of the projects was by Michael Montanaro and Harry Smoak. The
concept was simple. There were two dancers going through a choreo-
graphed routine on stage in front of a large screen. A motion-sensing
camera analyzed their movement. When the movement reached a certain
qualitative threshold — a certain speed and density of gesture — a video
window opened up on the screen. But it wasn ’ t at all like a Windows
window, thankfully. It was like a visual bubble that grew from nothing and
expanded. It was like vision was fl owering out of the screen, expressing a
quality of movement, its speed and density, purely visually, in a sight that
78 Chapter 2
doubled the actual movement. It was a semblance of movement transduc-
ing it onto a different register of experience and into a differently dimen-
sioned space, a surface. The translation was analogue, as all transduction
is according to Simondon, even though technically it was digitally achieved,
because what was expressed on the screen was a quality of the movement.
A quality of the movement was made visible with and through the actual,
digitally projected image of it. The screen also made otherwise perceptible
another quality of movement — its rhythm. When the speed and density
subsided, the vision bubble started to break apart at the edges, emanating
micro-bubbles of vision, then collapsed into itself. You got a strong sense
of thinking-feeling qualities of movement, and not just seeing bodies in
movement and their images. This sensation doubled the technical connec-
tion between the bodies in movement and the movement on screen with
a more encompassing semblance, a lived quality of the interaction under-
way, a semblance of the global situation. This is what I meant when I said
Michael Montanaro, Harry Smoak, and Topological Media Lab, Artaudian Lights .
Calligraphic video, structured light, experiment at movement, and responsive archi-
tecture workshop, TML, Montreal, Canada, 2006.
The Thinking-Feeling of What Happens 79
that the ins and outs of the interaction can fold back in together to produce
a semblance of the whole interaction. Toni Dove ’ s interactive project,
Spectropia , works at this same perceptual nexus, between body-movement
and its transduction on screen, but with the added dimension of cinematic
narrative. She uses the narrative element, among other things, to translate
the interaction into a participatory production of cinematic point of view
and even cinematic time. It ’ s all done with a conscious engagement with
the “ uncanniness ” of the interaction — a very ambitious and exciting
project in what interactive cinema can be.
V2 In the dance example, the interaction is staged. There ’ s the traditional
theatrical separation between the performers and the audience. The inter-
action is only between the performers and the technology.
BM That ’ s what the audience said. The project was strongly challenged
because of that. People said it was politically bankrupt because it had no
“ real ” interaction, and it embraced the stage space without attempting to
network out of it. I think that criticism misses the point. It ’ s that reductive
idea about framing I mentioned awhile back — that the frame is reducible
to the actual spatial parameters, and anything that appears within that
frame has no relation to anything outside. It ’ s the idea again of “ elitist ”
art trying to be “ autonomous ” in the most obvious sense of the term. Why
not accept for a moment the constraints that the artist has carefully built
in, and see what you can feel with them? It may turn out to be autonomous
in the way I redefi ned it — in a relation-of-nonrelation with other forma-
tions that might analogically “ want ” it and be able to capture and reframe
it, so that it expands or contracts to fi t other spaces and takes off from
other conditions, where its effect could well be political. While it is true
that the audience was not in on the interaction, they were in on the rela-
tion. You couldn ’ t not see the relation between movement and vision
being recomposed before your eyes. You felt the dancers making an actual
sight of their bodies ’ imperceptible movement talents. Kinesthesia was not
only fused with movement, it was like vision itself was emerging from it.
Body vision. Kinesthesia was making vision appear in the bubble, and the
bubble was making bodily qualities of movement appear — a double capture
of vision by movement and movement by vision, in a unique composition.
Why can ’ t that experiential double capture of separate dimensions of
experience lend itself to a double capture between the theatrical space
80 Chapter 2
housing it and other spaces of interaction? Think of the way vision and
movement are coupled so banally in the urban environment, subordinated
to the maximum to functional circulation. What if this new composition
of kinesthesia and vision were recomposed within an urban performance
envelope? What might that do? Who or what might want that?
I don ’ t know. The artist doesn ’ t know. The audience didn ’ t want to think
about it. But that doesn ’ t mean that the potential for a transduction of
that kind wasn ’ t effectively produced. Xin Wei, responding to the audi-
ence ’ s critiques, said something I ’ m in complete agreement with. He said
that the point of the Topological Media Lab was to do speculative work with
technology. That doesn ’ t mean that we ’ re supposed to speculate on what
the technology might potentially do or who or what might want it or even
what it does. It means that the work itself technically speculates. Its dynamic
form is speculative by nature. It ’ s a speculative event . To speculate is to turn
in on yourself. You turn in, in order to connect immanently with what is
absolutely outside — both in the sense of belonging to other formations
monadically separated from your present world, and in the sense of what
may come but is unforeseeable. Xin Wei was suggesting that technically
staged situations, understood as aesthetic events of recomposition, can also
do that. When they do, what is happening is an exploratory collective
thinking, a collective thought-event of the outside.
When Lozano-Hemmer talks about relational “ architecture, ” he doesn ’ t
mean architecture in the narrow disciplinary sense (although of course
architecture may itself be practiced relationally). It ’ s similar to what I ’ m
talking about here: the technical staging of aesthetic events that speculate
on life, emanating a lived quality that might resonate elsewhere, to unpre-
dictable affect and effect. Stagings that might lend themselves to analogical
encounter and contagion. That might get involved in inventive accidents
of history. It ’ s about architectures of the social and political unforeseen
that enact a relation-of-nonrelation with an absolute outside, in a way that
is carefully, technically limited and unbounded.
Demands made on art to display its actual political content, or to
observe a certain actual form that is deemed more political, are demands
to curtail this kind of speculation, and the aesthetic politics it performs.
They are demands to curtail aesthetic potential. There is nothing in prin-
ciple wrong with that. As I said, life ’ s an art of dosages, and there can be
very good reasons to dope artistic potential with explicit political content.
The Thinking-Feeling of What Happens 81
It ’ s just when that becomes a general injunction against certain kinds of
experimentation that it becomes a concern to me, and I fi nd myself vigor-
ously dissenting.
V2 This has been a long conversation, and you haven ’ t used the word
“ media ” once, except maybe in the stock phrase “ new media. ” It ’ s a word
that ’ s all over the place in interactive art. Why have you shied away from
this concept?
BM Because I don ’ t think it is one. I mean, I think the concept of media
is in crisis. It ’ s in tatters. That ’ s because the digital isn ’ t a medium, but it ’ s
currently dominating the media fi eld. Digital technology is an expanding
network of connective and fusional potentials. You can take an input in
any sense modality, and translate or transduce it into any other, say sound
into image. You can take any existing genre of artistic practice and fuse it
with any other, say animation with cinema. Digital technology has no
specifi city as a medium in its own right. That is why commentators like
Lev Manovich call it a “ meta-medium ” (2005). But that doesn ’ t get you
very far. From there, the best you can do is catalogue the kinds of connec-
tions that are possible and chart their permutations. It leads to an ency-
clopedic approach. At best, it gives you a combinatory fl owchart, what
Manovich calls a remix map. It entirely shelves the question of art and
artfulness. It doesn ’ t give you any vocabulary to think the properly aes-
thetic dimension, what makes digital art “ art. ”
The basic problem is that the concept of media was never well-formed.
Theorists have argued endlessly about what defi nes a medium. Is a medium
defi ned by the material support, say celluloid for cinema? If so, is digital
cinema then not cinema? Is a medium defi ned by the sense modality the
product presents itself in — sound for music, vision for cinema? That alter-
native misses the absolutely fundamental fact of experience that the senses
can take each other up. Michel Chion (1994) made that point about
cinema. He showed that it is not visual. It operates through what he calls
audiovision, a singular-generic fusion-effect of sound and image that
emerges when they operate in resonance with one another. Neither sound
nor image, audiovision is a kind of effective cross-resonance between their
respective potentials. The cinematic image, according to him, is a singular
kind of relational effect that takes off from both vision and audio but is
irreducible to either. It comes of how they come together. It ’ s a thirdness,
82 Chapter 2
a supplement or boosting that needs them both to happen, but isn ’ t one
or the other, even though we say we “ watch ” a fi lm. It has an experiential
quality all its own. It ’ s not a simple mix. A fusion is more than a mix. We
“ watch ” a fi lm amodally, seeing through the cinematic fusion-effect. We are
watching at the immanent limit of vision, seeing sight reel into wormhole,
only to bootstrap itself out for another scene. Chion ’ s analyses of audiovi-
sion has the merit of emphasizing the fusional aspect of cinematic
experience.
Mixing as a concept just doesn ’ t go very far either. It has the same limi-
tations as the concept of meta-medium. It ’ s just a general name for the
mapping operations that meta-media theory attributes to digital technol-
ogy. Both concepts repose on the concept of connectivity. The “ mapping ”
is a charting of interconnectivity — what I talked about earlier as local part-
to-part connection. Extrinsic rather than immanent relation. These con-
cepts don ’ t suffi ciently problematize interactivity.
Beyond that, there ’ s the whole problem of the unexamined assumptions
about perception that go into the very notion of “ mediation. ” Perception
as I have been trying to talk about it, as Whitehead ’ s philosophy says, and
as embodied cognition also says, is always direct and im mediate. It ’ s always
its own self-embracing event, one with its own occurrence.
Chion is pointing us in the right direction when he analyzes cinema as
staging a certain kind of experiential fusion-event. For an aesthetic politics,
I don ’ t think you can use a typology based on the media as they ’ ve been
traditionally defi ned, and then mix and shake. There is philosophical work
to be done, concepts to compose, and this has to be done with as much
technique, even artfulness, as any other craft. The concepts needed must
differentiate between lived qualities of experience as it happens. It must
be capable of accounting for different kinds of technically achieved fusion
and resonance events.
All arts are occurrent arts . That ’ s another phrase from Susanne Langer
(1953, 121). All arts are occurrent arts because any and every perception,
artifactual or “ natural, ” is just that, an experiential event. It ’ s an event both
in the sense that it is a happening, and in the sense that when it happens
something new transpires. There is eventfulness in art, just as there is
artfulness in nature. And there is creativity across the board. Because every
event is utterly singular, a one-off, even though with and through its
The Thinking-Feeling of What Happens 83
one-offness a “ likeness ” is necessarily thought-felt to a whole population
of other events with which it forms an endless series of repeated variations.
Langer has probably gone further than any other aesthetic philosopher
toward analyzing art-forms not as “ media ” but according to the type of
experiential event they effect.
You have to rethink what the typology is based on, but also what a
typology can be logically. It doesn ’ t have to be a classifi cation system, in
the sense of subsuming particulars under an abstract, general idea. It can
be based on a differentiating singular-generic thought-feelings. That is to
say, it can try to take into account the kind of abstraction that effectively
makes a perception what it will have been — the really lived abstraction of
that singular thinking-feeling. This is a generative typology, of dynamic
forms of perception ’ s speculative appearing to itself and in itself. It is an
immanent typology or a typology of immanence. It amounts to the same
thing. The kind of logic called for is what Simondon called allagmatic , an
operative logic of the analog expressing “ the internal resonance of a system
of individuation ” (Simondon 2005, 48, 61). This is a diagrammatic logic.
It is a logic of individuation, because this kind of typology will have to
keep generating variations on itself, as the experience is always being
restaged as an event and in the event, recomposed from within. New
dynamic forms are always immanently emerging. Art is part and parcel of
that process. Its practice speculatively advances its own generative typol-
ogy. It practically contributes to its own thinking.
Thinking art is not about imposing a general overlay on its practice.
The last thing it should be about is forcing art to fi t into another disci-
pline ’ s categories, and holding it to them. It ’ s about putting art and phi-
losophy, theory and practice, on the same creative plane, in the same ripple
pool. Art and philosophy, theory and practice, can themselves resonate
and effectively fuse. Thinking-feeling art philosophically can intensify art ’ s
speculative edge. It ’ s totally unnecessary to put theory and practice at odds
with each other.
V2 One last question. A lot of your vocabulary might strike people as a
new romanticism — all the talk of lived qualities and life-feeling, not to
mention oceanic experience, a term you actually used without cringing.
What would you say to someone who accused you of doing little more
than reviving romanticism for the interactive age?
84 Chapter 2
BM There are worse things to be accused of, I guess. Any time you try to
talk about what happens in the world in qualitative terms, you ’ re bound
to be accused of waxing romantic. Personally, I don ’ t think of it as a
romanticism. Remember that the ocean came in drops, and there is as
much separation between drops as there is pooling. And the pooling can
just as well turn out to be a puddle. Sense of aliveness in a mud-puddle is
not terribly exalting. I ’ m not advocating a romanticism of connection.
That ’ s actually what I ’ ve been arguing against. Neither is it about an exalta-
tion of relation. I try to emphasize that the notion of the virtual requires
that all relation actually be seen as a relation-of-nonrelation. Connection
and relation, such as they are, are not always exhilarating. They can be
terrifying. Or boring. Or restricting. It gets you nowhere to romanticize
them. But it is important to give them their due, as much politically as
philosophically and artistically, and without imposing a value judgment
on them from outside or at a general level. Giving continuity and relation
their due also involves doing the same for discontinuity, because they are
necessarily implicated in each other. Something that is continuous with
itself is so precisely because it detaches its activity from the outside it
absolutely lives-in. Also, events continuously unfold, but across their
unfolding they inevitably “ perish, ” as Whitehead would say. Continuity
and discontinuity are in reciprocal presupposition. The problem is
always to evaluate, case by case, in what way they implicate each other:
how they are.
If I am guilty of romanticizing anything, it would be intensity . By inten-
sity I mean the immanent affi rmation of a process, in its own terms. This
is not a stated affi rmation. It ’ s an activity. It ’ s when a process tends to the
limit of what only it can do, and in that act resonantly embraces its own
range of variation. It ’ s not mystical to call that self-affi rming “ life. ” If you
like Latin, you can join Spinoza and call it conatus. You can call it many
names. The important thing once again is that in each instance you ask
and answer “ how. ” Then it becomes a technical question of ontogenesis , or
of the self-production of being in becoming.
Even if you do call it life, that doesn ’ t necessarily land you in a vitalism,
because there is no need to posit a life-substance or life-force “ behind ”
appearances. All you need posit is the appearance of a tendency. A ten-
dency, as it appears, is always, only, and entirely in process. But tendency
is already a complex notion, because it implies a certain self-referentiality.
The Thinking-Feeling of What Happens 85
Tendency is a performed self-referencing to other states, past and potential.
As such, it is a way in which an event in some sense, not necessarily
consciously — in fact most often and in large part nonconsciously — feels
itself, catches itself in the relational act. And in some sense, not yet sepa-
rable from this feeling, nonsensuously thinks itself, in that very same act.
This is what Whitehead calls “ prehension ” and what Deleuze calls “ con-
templation. ” Both authors apply these concepts to all events, whether they
occur on organic or inorganic strata. I suspect that this is where many
people would part ways. To accompany this kind of thinking, you have to
be open to the possibility of rethinking the world as literally made of feel-
ings, of prehensive events. The philosophy of the event, in Whitehead ’ s
words, is an immanent “ critique of pure feeling ” (Whitehead 1978, 113).
The feeling is “ pure ” because it needs no subject — or object for that mat-
ter — outside the dynamic form of the event ’ s own monadic occurrence.
You have to be willing to see the world in a semblance. That could be
mystical. But then again, it could be a question of technique.
Given that the question of technique is at the core of the approach I ’ ve
been outlining, I like to think of it as a speculative pragmatism , understood
as a species of empiricism closely akin to William James ’ s radical empiricism .
This way of formulating might be more companionable to more people.
As James defi ned it, there are fi ve guidelines of radical empiricism. The fi rst
it shares with classical empiricism:
1. Everything that is, is in perception (read, if you will: in prehension).
Radical empiricism begins to part company with classical empiricism with
the next guideline:
2. Take everything as it comes. You cannot pick and choose according to
a priori principles or pre-given evaluative criteria. Since things come in
lumps as well as singly, this means that:
3. Relations must be accounted as being as real as the terms related. In
other words, relations have a mode of reality distinct from that of the
discrete objects that appear as terms in relation. The mode of reality of
relation is immanent, lived intensely in under conditions of mutual inclu-
sion (worldly activation). The separable terms that come to be in relation
come in a mode of extrinsic connection, governed by the law of the
excluded middle. They are extensively lived-out (functional interaction).
The living-in and the living-out are contrasting poles, and coincident
86 Chapter 2
phases, of the same ontogenetic process. The sense of “ relation ” and of
“ real ” change signifi cantly depending on which ontogenetic level the focus
is on. It follows from this, in light of the fi rst guideline, that:
4. Relations are not only real, they are really perceived, and directly so.
Relations not only have their own mode of reality, but each has its own
immediate mode of appearance. The fi nal guideline says that the vast
majority of what is, in perception, actually isn ’ t:
5. “ Ninety-nine times out of a hundred, ” James writes, the terms and rela-
tions that appear “ are not actually but only virtually there ” (1996a, 69,
71 – 72). They are present beyond the frame, on the “ chromatic fringes ”
(73) and at the processual vanishing point, or “ terminus, ” in James ’ s
vocabulary, where each event turns in on its own unfolding toward its
tendential end. “ Mainly, we live on speculative investments ” (88). The
empirical world is ninety-nine percent lived speculation, a surfi ng “ on the
front edge of a wave-crest ” of “ tendency ” (69). In order to avoid a romanti-
cism of connection, James drums it in that guideline number two, take
everything as it comes, means that you have to take continuity and dis-
continuity as they come. The beach-falls with the wave-cresting. You have
to give each its due. By which time this has continued quite long enough.
— cut —
3 The Diagram as Technique of Existence: Ovum of the
Universe Segmented
I
“ We judge colors by the company they keep ” (Lamb and Bourriau 1995,
149). Colors are convivial. “ A ” color “ is an alteration of a complete spec-
trum ” (Westphal 1987, 84). However lonely in appearance, a color is in
the company of its kin — all its potential variations. The spectrum is the
invisible background against which “ a ” color stands out. It is the ever-
present virtual whole of each color apart. 1
II
“ I was in a totally white room. As I held the prism before my eyes, I
expected, keeping Newtonian theory in mind, that the entire white wall
would be fragmented into different colors, since the light returning to the
eye would be seen shattered in just so many colored lights. But I was quite
amazed that the white wall showing through the prism remained as white
as before. Only where there was something dark did a more or less distinct
color show. . . . It required little thought to recognize that an edge was
necessary to bring about color . I immediately spoke out to myself, through
instinct, that Newtonian theory was erroneous. . . . Everything unfolded
itself before me bit by bit. I had placed a white sheet of glass upon a black
background, looking at it through the prism from a given distance, thus
representing the known spectrum and completing Newton ’ s main experi-
ment with the camera obscura. But a black sheet of glass atop a light, white
ground also made a colored, and to a certain degree a gorgeous specter.
Thus when light dissolves itself in just so many colors, then darkness must
also be viewed as dissolved in color ” (Goethe 1972, 35; emphasis added).
88 Chapter 3
The spectrum is convivial. It is always in the company of darkness. The
range of achromatic variation forms a larger encompassing whole against
the background of which the spectrum appears. “ Color and illumination
constitute . . . an indissoluble unity. . . . One illumination with its colors
emerges from the other, and merges back into it; they are both indicators
and bearers of each other ” (Katz 1935, 294).
Bearers of each other, triggered into being by an edge. The convivial
edge of emergence: one line indicating all, presenting the continuity of
variation that is the shadowy background of existence. And at the same
time effecting separation: the spectral distinction of what actually appears.
Merging; emerging. Virtual; actual. One line.
III
“ There must be a continuity of changeable qualities. Of the continuity of
intrinsic qualities of feeling we can now form but a feeble conception. The
development of the human mind has practically extinguished all feelings,
except a few sporadic kinds, sound, colors, smells, warmths, etc., which
now appear to be disconnected and disparate. In the case of colors, there
is a tridimensional spread of feelings [hue, saturation, brightness]. Origi-
nally, all feelings may have been connected in the same way, and the
presumption is that the number of dimensions was endless. For develop-
ment essentially involves a limitation of possibilities. But given a number
of dimensions of feeling, all possible varieties are obtainable by varying
the intensities of the different elements. Accordingly, time logically sup-
poses a continuous range of intensity in feeling. It follows, then, from the
defi nition of continuity, that when any particular kind of feeling is present,
an infi nitesimal continuation of all feelings differing infi nitesimally from that is
present ” (Peirce 1992a, 323 – 324).
The enveloping of color and illumination in one another extends
through the senses, each one bearing and indicating all. Mutually enfold-
ing. A many-dimensioned virtual whole of feeling is enfolded in every
actual appearance in any given sense mode. Synesthesia. A color, smell, or
touch is an emergent limitation of the synesthetic fold: its differentiation.
A color, smell, or touch extinguishes the whole in its difference. And in
the same stroke presents it: as the totality of its own potential variations.
All the befores and afters it might be, instantaneously. The distinctness of
The Diagram as Technique of Existence 89
each present perception is accompanied by a vague infi nity of self-conti-
nuity. An integral synchrony of befores and afters. Unbeen, beable. Time-
like, logically prior to linear time. In the limits of the present. Wholly,
virtually, vaguely. Differentiallly. Edging into existence.
IV
“ Let the clean blackboard be a sort of Diagram of the original vague poten-
tiality, or at any rate of some early stage of its determination. . . . This
blackboard is a continuum of two dimensions, while that which it stands
for is a continuum of some indefi nite multitude of dimensions. . . . I draw
a chalk line on the board. This discontinuity is one of those brute acts by
which alone the original vagueness could have made a step toward defi -
niteness. There is a certain element of continuity in this line. Where did
the continuity come from? It is nothing but the original continuity of the
black board which makes everything upon it continuous. What I have
really drawn there is an oval line. For this white chalk-mark is not a line ,
it is a plane fi gure in Euclid ’ s sense — a surface , and the only line that is
there is the line which forms the limit between the black surface and the
white surface. This discontinuity can only be produced upon that
blackboard by the reaction between two continuous surfaces into which
it is separated, the white surface and the black surface. The white is a
Firstness — a springing up of something new. But the boundary between
the black and white is neither black, nor white, nor neither, nor both. It
is the pairedness of the two. It is for the white the active Secondness of
the black; for black the active Secondness of the white ” (Peirce 1992b,
261 – 262).
Something new: First. And with it, simultaneously and indissociably, a
Secondness: a visible separation of surfaces. The separation is across an
insubstantial boundary, itself imperceptible. Pure edge. Neither black nor
white. Not neither not both. A virtual line.
An insubstantial boundary does not effectively enclose. Quite to the
contrary, it “ actively ” connects that which it separates. The virtual line is
the activity of relation of the black and the white: a reciprocal coming-
Second. It embodies the event of that pairedness. The pure edge invisibly
presents the immediacy of spatially and chromatically differentiated sur-
faces to each other. That immediacy is also an immediacy of forms. The
90 Chapter 3
virtual line is the event of the oval and the plane coming-together: their
belonging to each other. As proto-fi gures to each other ’ s oscillating ground.
“ Like the ovum of the universe segmented ” (Peirce 1992b, 262).
A perceptible difference has emerged from vague potential. The continu-
ity of the virtual whole of be-ability has fed forward onto the plane of
actual being-different. As been, the whole presents itself twice. Once: in
the concrete surface continuity of black and of white. Again: in the pure
abstractness of the invisible line separating and connecting the surfaces.
Surfaced, continuity is on either side of a divide. It bifurcates into a
perceptual contrast between co-present and disjunct elements. A “ co-pres-
ence of disjunct elements ” : the defi nition of space. The “ integral syn-
chrony ” of mutually enfolded before-afters has been supplemented by
something planely spatialized. A spatiality is emerging from its own poten-
tial time-likeness. It has unfolded as an after, its before almost left behind.
Continuity is no longer entirely in self-continuity. It is divided, supple-
mentarily, into a double difference-from: direct contrast, spatial and
temporal.
The co-surfacing of the oval and the plane does not entirely detach from
the continuum of potential. The insubstantial boundary separating and
connecting them retains the vagueness of the virtual whole: neither this
nor that. Neither black nor white, neither plane nor oval. Rather, the pure
activity of their relating. Reciprocally, in their spatial separation. Recur-
sively, in a kind of instantaneous oscillation joining the disjunct in mutual
Seconding. Actively, reciprocally, recursively. Eventfully: the boundary pre-
serves an edge of timelikeness. The virtual line is the virtual whole as it
edges, imperceptibly, into the actual. Timelike continuity is drawn out of
itself, cutting into the actual, where it appears as pure edging: discontinuity
in person. Unenclosing, the line is not a boundary in the usual sense. It is
spatializ ing (its timelike cutting-in constitutes the simultaneity of the sur-
facing disjunction). But it is not in itself spatial. The virtual line is less an
outline than a limit . It is the processual limit between the virtual and the
actual, as one verges actively on the other. The “ brute act ” of the actual
and the virtual relating. Drawing each other, to the verge of formal defi ni-
tion. Contrastive difference is proto-fi gural : emergently ordered, insubstan-
tially bounded.
The defi ning limit of the proto-fi gural is doubly an openness . On the
level of actual being, it is the active reciprocity of differentiated forms to
The Diagram as Technique of Existence 91
each other. Between that level and its be-ability, it is the openness of
forms to their belonging-together, infi nitely, continuously, indefi nitely in
potential.
The double openness is of relating.
“ The line is the relation ” (James 1950, 149).
V
Now multiply lines on the board, each succeeding mark intersecting the
last at a set angle. A black oval now stands out against distinctly against
the white edging of the lines. Make the lines black ink and the background
white paper. The effect is the same: a fi gure is distinctly visible. The prolif-
eration of line -ovals has emerged from its own repetition into a
super-oval.
The unity of the fi gure strikes the eye immediately, even though it is
composed. It is a gestalt. Its fi gurative unity stands out from the multiplic-
ity of its constituent marks. The edge has taken on a visible thickness. The
line has propagated into an outline.
The imperceptibility of each mark ’ s virtual edge no longer presents
itself, disappearing into the thick of boundaried vision. Separating more
than it connects, the intervening boundary brings a palpable stillness to
the fi gure it encloses. The immediate reciprocity of black and white has
settled into a mediation of two surfaces that divided from each other but
92 Chapter 3
qualitatively the same — white-inside separated from white-outside. The
“ activity ” or eventfulness of the contrast is lost, along with its immediacy.
What directly strikes the eye is no longer an invisible, yet vaguely palpable,
oscillation evocative of infi nite potential. Rather, it is the stillness of a
fi gure, standing out.
The stillness of the fi gure ’ s inside is echoed, muted, in the white outside
against which it stands, mediated by the boundary. Mutual Secondness of
black-Firstness and white-Firstness is replaced by boundaried offset of
white against white. The boundary sets same against same. The only dif-
ference between white and white is the relative emphasis of foreground
over background. What comes with the edge is no longer a singularly
direct, qualitative difference in perception. It is a relative emphasis of
qualitative homogeneity.
The direct “ pairedness ” of pure, open contrast is replaced by an opposi-
tion between mediated sames. The opposition is an effect of the fi gure ’ s
perceptual closure, its boundaried enclosure. The white outside is limited
to a neutral backgrounding for the inside ’ s standing out. The fi gure ’ s stand-
ing out is passively delimited by that standing back. Outside, inside are
offset against each other as different regions defi ned by the boundary: they
are spatialized. Figure, ground, and their across-the-boundary relation are
spatialized. They are set in place relative to each other. The edgy activity
of relation no longer presents itself as it did before. Where once was a
singularly direct Seconding across the absolute limit of a time-like edge of
no dimension, there is now a spatial relativity of fi gure to ground across
the inky blackness of a fi lled-in boundary.
The emergent activity of relation has given place to the stable relativity
of disjunct gestalt result. The oval ’ s standing out stands still in space, as if
it had stepped out of time. The stillness of fi gure seems to stand in space
for a species of eternity: a particular instance of a Platonic form. The sin-
gularity of an edging into existence has yielded to the appearance of a
particular instance of a general type.
The ovum of the universe, as been. Hatched eternal.
Look closely, and you will still almost-see the invisible edge of each
constituent mark. Use your imagination. Each mark is imperceptibly
bounded by a virtual line. Thus the marks never effectively intersect. There
are cracks between them. Since they do not intersect, they never actually
form a boundary. Their iteration fractally multiplies the cracks,
The Diagram as Technique of Existence 93
intensifying edginess. The unity of the fi gure is actually composed of a
cross-proliferation of virtual cracks. The unity is abstract, superadded as a
perceptual bridge across the cracking. The super-oval resulting from the
bridging in-fi ll is not so much seen as overseen . Look closely, and you will
see the bridging, you will undersee the seething cracks. Activity, under-still.
As the fi gure crumbles into the cracks it straddles, the background rearises
from its mute subordination. Whites and blacks rebecome reciprocating
proto-fi gures to each other ’ s oscillating ground, or grounding oscillation,
their active contrast afl oat in a deepening virtual abyss. Hatched eternity
dissolves back into a vaguely timelike coming together of qualitative dif-
ferings-from, immediately grounded in a co-fl otation of Seconding: recip-
rocally self-standing.
The fuller the unity of the fi gure, the better actualized the fi gure, the
more multiply and intensely the virtual edges in upon it. The more pas-
sively the fi gure stands out in its unity, the more actively its multiplying
constituents reciprocally self-stand. The undermining insistence of the
virtual is a complementary and inverse movement to the actualization of
the fi gure. The virtual is gestalted out of the picture by the same iterative
process that fractals it in ever more deeply. Double articulation between
levels: of emergent proto-fi gural activity and its resulting fi gurative
annulment.
Double vision. Looking more or less closely, focusing more or less atten-
tively, the eye oscillates between the annulment of the process and its
activity. Flicker. Between fully-hatched stability and continuing, cracked
emergence. Flicker. Between the made and the making. Flicker. Between
seeing the fi gurative stability and seeing the imperceptible fl oat of fi gural
potential. Flicker. The eye tires of the fl icker. It habituates to bridge-level
stability. The eye is the organ of habitual oversight.
The fi gure is an habitual inattention to the imperceptible in vision.
VI
We have returned to double vision when we can say that “ it is nonsense
to talk of form perception ” (Gibson 1986, 178) — all the while acknowledg-
ing that the “ nonsense ” is directly and effectively seen. Or when we say
that “ the fi gure-ground phenomenon does not apply to the world ” (Gibson
1986, 66) — even as we hang pictures on our walls. Or when we say “ there
94 Chapter 3
is no special kind of perception called depth perception ” (Gibson 1986,
148) because space itself “ has nothing to do with perception ” in the act
of edging in (Gibson 1986, 3) — as we measure where the new sofa might
go. Or when we say that “ we perceive not time but processes ” of emergence
(Gibson 1986, 12) — impatiently checking our watch.
When we say these things, we are saying that form, fi gure/ground,
Euclidean space, and linear time are not foundations or containers of per-
ception. Experience cannot be derived from them; it is they that emerge
with experience. Experience cannot be contained by them; they are among
its contents. They are derivations of a more open process: superadditions
of habit. Creatures of habit, not grounds of perception (which, as we have
almost-seen, is actively self-standing).
This does not imply that we can turn completely away from the level
of formal stability. We can never, of course, literally see the imperceptible
“ ground ” of potential over which the fi gure actually hangs. But then we
cannot literally see the fi gure either. We see our fi ll. Vision is never literal,
always fi gurative, in an outstandingly direct, overfull way. Acknowledging
that does not concede potential and the virtual. For if we cannot see the
imperceptible, we can sometimes see the fl icker of the fi gure as it emerges
from it. We can undersee the proto-fi gural abyssing the fi gure. Seeing the
fi gure ’ s self-standing by underseeing it is as close as we come to glimpsing
potential. We almost-see it, edgily side-perceive it, approaching the actual
limit of vision.
VII
How could we ever literally see a unitary form or fi gure when the light
striking our eye is splintered into countless separate points by the rods and
cones populating the retina? Gloss over the gaps. How could we literally
see a continuous surface-surround of space when our very own nose
sunders our fi eld of vision in two — not to mention the holes poked in both
halves by the blindspot of each eye? Bridge it over. How could we see depth
when our retinas are two-dimensional to begin with, even before what
they register is poked, sundered, and splintered? Superadd it. We see unity
of form in excess of our eyes.
What literally strikes our eye is edging . Not only color, but space, time,
fi gure/ground, and formal stability, in their reciprocal difference and on
The Diagram as Technique of Existence 95
their respective levels, all of these emerge from the edge of illumination.
For the simple reason that light scatters. Its scatter carries interference pat-
terns, gaps, and gradients of intensity: lines of proto-fi gural differentiation.
This “ ambient light array ” is what literally strikes the eye. (Gibson 1986,
65 – 92). A chaos of vision. For not only does the array continually change,
but a body is always moving: a complex coupling of two continual varia-
tions. Even more: the fl icker almost-seen in emergent form is prefi gured
by jitter. “ Saccade ” : the constant, involuntary micro-jerking of the eyeballs
in their sockets. If the jerking stops, vision blanks out. Vision arises from
the addition of random jitter to a complex coupling of two continual
variations. How do unity of form, stability of spatial relation, constancy
of color and brightness, and linearity of time derive from these impossibly
complex, chaotic conditions? We already know the answer: by superadding
to the seen.
The continual variation draws the proto-fi gural lines of the ambient
array across the gaps between the rods and cones, across the nose hole,
and across the blindspots. The discontinuities are giddily bridged by a
continuity of movement. The bridging does not yield a unifi ed fi gure or
stability of ground. It yields a complex of moving lines of light continuing
across invisible abysses of darkness. Proto-bridges of continuity, self-stand-
ing, over a void of vision.
To get an emergent fi gure, you need to add senses other than vision. In
particular, touch and proprioception, the registering of the displacements
of body parts relative to each other. Say a varying complex of light-lines
comes to the eye with a change in proprioception. Intersensory conjunc-
tion: the fi rst complex of moving light-lines segues into another. With the
new complex comes a feeling from an outstretched hand: intersensory
conjunction. Say the two intersensory conjunctions repeat. Next, their
repetition is anticipated. Habit. The anticipation is recursive, since it arises
retrospectively from an iteration of already repeated line crossings and
conjunctions. Habit is the actual experience of a before-after, in a continu-
ity of present conjunction. Of course there are also smell and hearing. A
panoply of before-afters merge into and emerge out of each other, bearers
one of the other, folded together by habit. The folding together fuses an
infi nite continuum of potential crossings and conjunctions, befores and
afters, into the singularity of an event of perception. A vague, unbounded
virtual whole self-presents without actually appearing: abstract “ ovum ” of
96 Chapter 3
an experiential universe emergent. “ When any particular kind of feeling
is present, an infi nitesimal continuation of all feelings differing infi nitesi-
mally from that is present. ” “ Development essentially involves a limita-
tion ” of that abstractly felt potential.
Say that on the level that limitatively develops, the two conjunctions
just described will be experienced as seeing an edge (complex of light-
lines), moving around it (proprioception), and touching something behind
that was occluded but is now visible (new complex of light-lines). The new
complex of light-lines is a second occlusion: there are still other things
behind the thing behind. Focus on what the habituating eyes register: an
edge, then an edge. After the habit has set in, the second edge will come
with the fi rst edge, in anticipation, before the movement around. It will
also come after the movement. Double articulation: before-after. Of course,
the second edge will come after the fi rst differently than it preceded itself:
with a touch and a proprioception. The before-after that is seen with the
fi rst edging is a simultaneous disjunction of surfaces: a germ of space, a
barely-there of navigable depth to move into. The anticipated coming-after
differently is a germ of linear time. The self-difference of the second edge
— the difference it encompasses between its coming after something else
and its preceding itself — is the germ of its identity as an object: its predict-
ability, its sameness across its variations, its reaccessibility time after time,
its dependable just-thereness.
Experiments have verifi ed that a “ surface . . . being uncovered [is] seen
to pre-exist before being revealed ” (Gibson 1986, 190). The identity of the
object is seen. Again with different emphasis: the identity of the object is
seen . Identity is a recursive (before-after) unity added by habit to the sight
of a simultaneous disjunctive difference. Identifi ed, the edging associated
with the object thickens into a stable contour. What now appears through
the edging is not a simple boundary but a 3D contour. The light arrays
habitually conjoined with the inside of the contour detach from the
ambient array, and come to be seen as the object ’ s color. The color makes
the object stand out, a visible 3D fi gure gestalting its way into the bright-
ness of being against a muted background onto which it casts its shadow.
Form and depth co-emergent. The ovum of the universe segmented: into
contrasting objects separated together. Together: adjacent in space. Sepa-
rate: succeeding each other in time. “ Of the continuity of feeling we can
now form but a feeble conception. ” That “ feeble conception ” is the
The Diagram as Technique of Existence 97
identity of the object in space, persisting stepwise across time. Identity is
the emergent activity of relation gone plodding.
The continuity intensely continues apace with the plodding. When
identity is seen, what is being seen is an anticipated next touch conjoined
with an anticipated next proprioception conjoined with an anticipated
second vision. The eye is functioning synesthetically to see the unseeable.
To oversee touch, proprioception, and its own present, skipping over the
here-now of its own formative activity, fed forward in anticipation of there-
afters. An anticipated touch, proprioception, or vision is a potential touch,
proprioception, or vision. The overseen is unseen potential. The unity of
identity, the simplicity, of the resulting object has been limitatively
extracted from the complex chaos. That chaos continues to be seen, feebly:
underseen in the form of identity. The chaos must continue for the object
to have something to reemerge from, as anticipated. Double vision: fi gura-
tive or objective order out of iteration; and a continuing chaos of
light ever-dawning. Vision abstractly oversees order by synesthetically
superadding habit ’ s abstractions to the singular immediacy of its
ever-renewing chaos.
The objective extraction of identity arises out of movement. Vision ’ s
synesthetic result stands on an oscillating kinesthetic “ ground. ” Perceived
stability and order emerge from perceptual chaos. Vision is the process of
that passage: from the giddiness of light-struck eyes to the practical grip
of abstract oversight. From the invisible abyss of the proto-fi gural to rela-
tive objective clarity.
Each time eye jitter draws an edge with the world ’ s continual variation,
a whole universe of potential abstractly appears to vision in the form of a
particular object among others, inhabiting the same order in space and
time. The edge effects a synesthetic-kinesthetic emergence layering levels
(objective foreground /background, potential next, virtual continuity) and
an ordering of identities (in an emergent space-time of experience).
VIII
Let ’ s go back to the drawing board. Draw a line, this time on a piece of
paper. The line draws forth the emergent edge again. The line repeats the
edgy event of appearing relating. “ The line is the relating; see it and you
see relation; feel it and you feel the relation ” (James 1950, 149). You have
98 Chapter 3
cracked opened a whole universe of proto-fi gural relation. You have
invoked the virtual. You have called the potential it enfolds toward exis-
tence. Nothing substantial has come of it. The potential is as yet only felt,
synesthetically-kinesthetically in vision renewing. But only-felt is almost
something. And already a great deal virtually: an infi nitesimal continuing
of all feeling. Any more, and it would come to less. The virtual would
actualize, limitatively.
Go for more (and less). Draw more lines, until a geometric fi gure defi nes
itself. You have fi guratively closed the virtual world by selecting one from
its infi nity of felt potentials. You have limitatively actualized the virtual.
There is nothing to be done. Except to draw another line. Return to the
edge, see and feel the relation. Enclose its active potential again in another
fi gure.
At each repetition, you draw forth an infi nite continuum of experiential
potential, then selectively deactivate it. You invoke active powers of exis-
tence, and move to enfeeble them. Renew, annul. Existential fl icker.
The annulment of powers of existence is all the more enfeebling when
more than one fi gure are laid side by side on a single page. The disjunctive
germ-space of pure contrast, fl ickering with the timelikeness of each mark ’ s
virtual edge, disappears. The page is now a neutralized space of compari-
son. Difference is no longer active. Active contrast has been passifi ed into
an opposition: a planely separated either/or. Either the fi gures are the same,
or they are not. Either they share an identity, or they do not. Sameness,
or mutual exclusion.
An opposition is not a duality in the Peircean sense. Duality is the self-
standing positivity of still-active contrast, pure unmediated “ pairedness ” :
the Secondness of a mutual Firstness springing forth from the formative
chaos of vision. Either/or applies to the already-sprung: completed fi gures.
It applies to the completed with an automatic view to a value judgment:
either/or, for better or for worse. Before an assessment of value can be
made, the question of whether the fi gures share an identity, whether they
are the same or whether they are mutually exclusive, must be answered.
Better or worse makes no sense applied to the same. Their identities must
be assessed. The only way to assess them is to compare them to each other
while comparing both against standards of identity . . . and the standard
makes three.
The Diagram as Technique of Existence 99
Comparison involves a Thirdness. A mediating third term is abstract
in much the way a Platonic form is: ideally still, glossing over the chaos
and the jitter. Except that it takes the gloss to a higher level. It raises the
mediation of fi gures off their shared surface to a space of judgment hover-
ing above. The standard hovers unseen in a thought-space above the
surface of perception. It is a height of generality. It is a general paragon. It
is ideal. As an ideal, it is not so much overseen as it is overseeing. It oversees
the correctness of the assessment.
The space of comparison is a normative space of ideal Thirdness rising
above. What goes up, can come down. Instead of an oval, draw a cube.
Project it onto a ground-level chaos. A razed plot of urban land, say. Think
of its form as an abstract sieve to fi lter the chaos. Then concretize the form.
Build a building according to its standard. The standard of comparison has
now returned to earth, as a constructive model. It has gone actively to
ground. A plot-size of selected abstract potential has been poured in con-
crete. Now it is a concrete ground for moving through and around. What
ambient arrays, what edgings in, what potential crossings and connections,
what glossings over, what identities and orderings will emerge from the
movement it standardizes? An architect has modeled a building. The build-
ing itself now takes the baton, and models a plot-sized slice of life.
IX
“ The greatest point of art consists in the introduction of suitable abstrac-
tions . By this I mean such a transformation of our diagrams that characters
of one diagram may appear in another as things ” (Peirce 1997, 226).
The empty blackboard was a diagram of the “ original vague potential-
ity ” at “ some early stage of its determination. ” The pure edge of the lone
line, the one that was actually an ovoid proto-fi gure, was a diagram of that
original vague potentiality ’ s continuum of variation at another phase of
its determination. The super-oval that was composed out of a number of
such lines was a diagram of a Platonic form, the formative vagueness now
glossed over in a fully determined fi gure, the activity of formation appear-
ing stilled. The reaccessibility of the object that revisited these phases in
volume, intersensorily, was also a diagram: that of a self-identical form in
3D space through time. Any ideal standard of comparison that might be
100 Chapter 3
applied to a fi gure or an objective form to overlay a value judgment on it
is also a diagram. Used as a model, it projects a fi gure ’ s Platonic form, and
an objective identity normatively conforming to it, into a new construc-
tion. In so doing, it selectively transfers to the thing under construction
certain “ characters ” that have forwarded through the process. The “ char-
acters ” are less the proto-fi gure, fi gure, or objective form as such than the
potentials that carry across them. It is these potentials that are selectively
lifted out of the continuum of variation, fi lter through the phases, and go
to ground as the concretization of a model.
Blank slate — singular proto-fi gure — stable fi gure — object identity — ideal
standard — general model. All of these are diagrams in their own right, each
in its own way. Each step in the process by which potentials lift into exis-
tence, fi lter through, and plot into a new construction, is also a diagram
according to Peirce ’ s just cited. In the most extended sense of the word,
the entire process is its own occurrent diagram.
The resulting new construction is an added existence. Pragmatically
speaking, its diagram is the toolbox of techniques — from seeing to over-
seeing, from habitual inattention to attentive habit, from comparison to
judgment, from judging to plotting, from projecting to constructing — that
went into shepherding a select set of potentials into the concreteness of
the construction ’ s added existence. The diagram in this sense is a con-
structivist technique of existence . It is a technique of bringing to new exis-
tence. A technique of becoming. Becoming-concrete. Becoming,
determined. If, as Peirce ’ s defi nition says, diagramming is abstraction —
an extraction of potential — then the very process of becoming determinately
concrete is a process of abstraction (Whitehead 1967b, 51 – 55, 157 – 179;
1978, 7 – 8).
This is where the questions begin . What, after all, is a “ suitable ” abstrac-
tion? If the abstraction process produces an interlocking of proto-fi gure,
fi gure, form of identity, standard, model, and construction is a process of
becoming, then the question becomes: which becoming? Why? To suit
whom or what? If becoming involves passing through phases selective of
potentials, the question is: which phases, for what potentials? If the passage
toward the fi nal determination of the construct is limitative, the question
is: is that the end of the story?
It isn ’ t, because there is still the question of how limitative, and in what
way. Perhaps all processes of abstraction for becoming-concrete are not
The Diagram as Technique of Existence 101
equal. Perhaps there are abstractive techniques of existence that curtail the
role of Platonic forms and skip the standardizing judgment phase. Perhaps
there are nonstandard constructivisms (Migayrou 2004).
A nonstandard constructivism would no longer be a modeling. It would
not select one set of potentials in conformity with a projected identity. It
might, for example, select several sets of potentials that do not habitually
share the same space or before-after each other in an easily anticipated
way. This would overdetermine the construction. Overdetermination makes
the construct problematic. Left at that, a nonstandard diagramming tech-
nique is de constructiv e . A deconstructive architecture combines what are
normally defi ned as “ mutually exclusive or opposing spatial strategies ”
into a single architectural element (Eisenman 1994, 21). For example, a
corridor that at fi rst approach seems to end incongruously in a wall. The
potentials for passage and for enclosure are overdetermined. These moments
of incongruity and overdetermination punctuate the architecture with
interruptors ( “ inversions, ” subversions). The aim is to momentarily subvert
the normative course of architectural practice and inhabitation, in order
to make a self-referential statement about architecture ’ s “ interior. ” To the
extent that it aims to construct a statement, deconstructive practice remains
“ authorial ” (Eisenman 1999, passim).
A different nonstandard abstractive technique of existence might plot
into a construction triggers for on-the-fl y selections of potential that give
pause, not primarily to interrupt and make a statement, but to invite and
enable an effective variation on continuing. These would be variously
determined, circumstantially, at particular junctures, in the course of the
movements that come to pass through the building. In other words, the
seeing/unseeing, potentially touching, always propriocepting, tirelessly
kinesthesing, constantly jittered, self-emphasizing, dynamic forms of
embodiment that fi nally enter in — the architectural “ clients ” and
“ stakeholders ” — are invited to continue the diagramming process to suit
themselves. They are invited to inhabit as embodied coauthors of the
architectural process, prolonged. Triggers are built in that jolt the emergent
proto-fi gural level to reappear, in abstract oscillation with other levels. The
continuum of potential is now un-unseen, without becoming objectively
visible. Instead: intersensorily felt to fl icker with the objective forms.
Rather than one or the other, continuum of potential or objective vision,
it would be the stroboscopic fl icker between them that would momentarily
102 Chapter 3
foreground itself at the trigger-juncture. Built in at strategic points would
be an eventful, fl ickering vagueness of resurgent abstraction doubling
vision. The process will have constructively brought back out the contin-
uum of abstract potential. The presence of the full continuum of potential
allows the experience to toggle between sets of potential. This is neither
inversion nor subversion. It is intensifi cation.
Whatever fi gures, formal identities, and even ideal standards and general
models that may also be built in alongside the trigger-juncture are submit-
ted to the fl icker of intensity. They do not dominate. They do not defi ni-
tively foreground themselves. “ Indicators and bearers of each other, ” they
collaborate in the toggling. They are no longer limitations, as they are in
standard, normative architecture. They are no longer constraining. They
are the enabling constraints of a renewed selection. The selective renewal
is of the kind that composes an “ alteration of a complete spectrum ” of
lived experience. It brings back to life its virtual color and shadow, in all
their intersensory textures. It recharges the activity of relating from which
all experience emerges. Becomings continue, in a prolonged chromatics of
variation. Ovum of the universe edgily re-segmented.
Not deconstruction: continued construction. Reconstruction, on the fl y.
Not interruption: recharging, resaturation with potential. For deconstruc-
tive strategies, architecture is a “ scene of writing ” (Eisenman 1999, 26 – 35).
For reconstructive strategies, it is a platform for diagrammatic reemergence.
Deconstructive strategies pointedly interrupt the event of architecture.
Reconstructive strategies fl uidly continue it.
None of this makes any sense if space is considered to be the medium
of architecture. Seen reconstructively, “ spatial strategies ” create the space
of inhabiting experience. This inhabiting event is the medium of architec-
ture. The architectural space of inhabiting-experience is always the
result of the diagrammatic process of architectural abstraction becoming-
concrete, as a prolonged event. What architecture recomposes in new
variations are not pre-given spatial elements. What it recomposes is the
experience of inhabitation itself. Architecture is a diagrammatic art of lived
abstraction: lived-in abstraction, in a quite literal sense. For nonstandard
reconstructive architecture, the inhabiting experience is also the continu-
ing product: the medium made eventfully renewable, beyond the fi nal
plotting of the design.
Skipping the standardized judgment phase means that new forms of
Thirdness must be invented. Only an intervention of Thirdness
The Diagram as Technique of Existence 103
can regulate becoming in any way, whether normatively for stability, or
self-renewably for the existential fl icker of reappearing potential. Because
that ’ s what Thirdness is: regulated passage from one phase to another.
Essentially, that means “ habit-taking ” (Peirce 1992a, 277). But it also means
“ law. ” Law in its “ original ” sense is nothing other than the regularity of
habit acquired in the chaotic course of emergent experience (276). In a
derivative sense, law is an imposition of habit from on high, through the
mediating infl uence of a comparative standard or normative model. It is
the challenge of any architectural process that wishes to live up to its voca-
tion for living-in diagrammatic abstraction to invent techniques of coming
to architectural existence that do not model in the traditional sense. That
reinvent pliable “ laws ” of architectural design in the “ original ” sense,
where the emergence of regularity “ mingles ” with a “ lawless ” element of
“ pure spontaneity. ” In a fl icker with chance. Law then returns to the “ pure
chance ” and vague “ indeterminacy ” it “ developed out of ” from the First
(276). So that it repeats the act of emergence. Evolutionary law fueled by
chance. Architecture reinventing itself, as it reinvents new techniques for
mingling chaos and regularity toward the determination of new architec-
tural form.
What a design practice of this kind does is meta-model , in the way F é lix
Guattari speaks of it (in a very different sense of “ meta- ” than in Manovich ’ s
“ meta-media, ” discussed in chapter 2 above; Guattari 1995, 22, 33, 127 –
128; Genosko and Murphie 2008). “ Meta- ” is to be understood here in its
etymological sense of “ among. ” It refers not to the on-high of the ideal, but
on the contrary to the spontaneous remingling of acquired regularities of
practice with the emergence-level chance and indeterminacy from which
they evolved. The practice itself is not of course chaotic. A commingling of
habit or law with spontaneity is at most quasi-chaotic (James 1996a, 63 – 65).
Meta-modeling is a practice that strategically returns its process to the
quasi-chaotic fi eld of its own emergence, in order to regenerate itself as it
generates new fi gures, forms, and constructs, for itself and others. So that
both the discipline, and its clients and stakeholders, live-in a fullness of
potential, as part of a continuing process. Commingling: activity of relat-
ing. Techniques of existence are techniques of relation.
Since what is relationally modulated with remingling technique is
potential, meta-modeling can be considered the procedure of the specula-
tive pragmatism suggested by the radical empirical perspective.
4 Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression: In Four
Movements
FIRST MOVEMENT: TO DANCE A STORM
Nonsensuous Similarity
“ We must assume, ” writes Walter Benjamin, “ that in the remote past the
processes considered imitable included those in the sky. ” People danced a
storm. Benjamin is quick to add that the similarity that made it possible
for the human body to imitate cloud and rain is different from what we
normally think of today as a resemblance. It could only have been a “ non-
sensuous ” similarity because nothing actually given to our senses corre-
sponds to what our bodies and the heavens have imitably in common.
Benjamin goes on to suggest that not only can this nonsensuous similarity
be acted out, it can be archived , “ most completely ” in language. But not
just in language. For nonsensuous similarity is what “ establishes the ties ”
between the written word and the spoken word, and between them both
and what is “ meant ” — meaning what is sensible (preceding quotes from
Benjamin 1999b, 721 – 722). It is in the ins-and-outs of language. Tied to
the senses but lacking sense content, it can nevertheless be “ directly
perceived ” — but “ only in feeling ” (Benjamin 1996a, 208). Direct and sense-
less in feeling, in and out of speech and writing, it evades both “ intuition
and reason ” (Ibid.). What is this paradoxical “ semblance in which nothing
appears ” (Benjamin 1996c, 223)? Simply: “ relationship ” (Benjamin 1996a,
208).
What is he talking about?
106 Chapter 4
Felt Perception
A good place to begin to fi nd an answer is movement. The perception of
the simplest movement responds in many ways to Benjamin ’ s criteria for
nonsensuous similarity. Movement has the uncanny ability, in the words
of experimental phenomenologist Albert Michotte, “ to survive the removal
of its object ” (Michotte 1963, 138). For example, Michotte might show you
a screen with a dot and a circle. The dot starts moving toward the circle.
Then just before the dot is about to hit the circle, it disappears. That is
what, objectively speaking, you will see. But that is not what you will feel
you saw. You report “ that the dot disappears while its movement continues
right up to the circle, and then is lost ‘ behind ’ it ” (Michotte 1963, 138).
There would be no sensory input corresponding to that movement. The
dot didn ’ t actually continue its path. It disappeared. Yet you would effec-
tively perceive its movement continuing. This wouldn ’ t be a hallucination.
A hallucination is seeing something that actually isn ’ t there. This is actu-
ally not-seeing something — yet directly experiencing it in vision all the
same. This is a category all its own: a felt extension of vision beyond where
it stops and ‘ behind ’ where it stays; a perceptual feeling, without the actual
perception. Sight furthered , following its own momentum. To the point
that it is only felt: not in perception, but as a perception.
Movement, Michotte sums up, is “ a phenomenon sui generis ” that may
“ detach itself from [the] objects ” of sight (Michotte 1963, 137).
Nonlocal Linkage
This kind of effect is not limited to special controlled conditions. When-
ever movement is perceived, we are presented with a “ double existence ” : a
physical registering of sensory input and a perceptual feeling of continuing
movement (Michotte 1963, 222).
Think of a case as ordinary as one billiard ball hitting another and
launching it forward. The sensory input impinging on the retina registers
two forms, each with its own trajectory. One moves toward the other and
stops. The other then starts and moves away. That is what we see. But what
we feel perceptually is the movement of the fi rst ball continuing with the
second. We perceptually feel the link between the two visible trajectories,
as the movement “ detaches ” itself from one object and transfers to another
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, First Movement 107
(Michotte 1963, 14 – 15). We are directly experiencing momentum, to
which nothing visible corresponds as such.
We are presented with a double existence whenever we perceive a move-
ment involving a change of state. With the dot, the change was a disap-
pearance. With the balls, it was causal, an impact effecting a launch. It
could be any number of other things, as well: for example, a “ tunneling ”
(one object ‘ seen ’ to pass behind another and come out the other side); an
“ entraining ” (one object approaching another and dragging or carrying it
off); an “ ampliation ” (a relay or spread of movement); an attraction, repul-
sion, or resistance; or, suggestively, an “ animation ” (a self-propulsion). The
variations are endless. But what they all have in common is that accom-
panying a plurality of forms or a combination of sensory inputs there is a
felt-perception of something unitary: a continuing across that seamlessly
links the separate elements or inputs as belonging to the same change.
A continuing-across is by nature a nonlocal linkage, since all of the sepa-
rate elements participate in it simultaneously from their individual posi-
tions. It is a “ well-known fact ” that these seamless linkages “ do not show
any observable resemblance ” to the objective combinations involved
(Michotte 1963, 225). How could they? The linkage is what the objects
share through their combination: implication in the same event . The felt
perception of continuing movement is qualitative because it directly grasps
the changing nature of the shared event ‘ behind, ’ ‘ across, ’ or ‘ through ’ its
objective ingredients and their observable combinations. It is, simply:
relationship. Directly perceptually-felt; “ nonsensuously ” perceived. 1
Now say you walk out of the pool hall and instead of billiard balls you
see a car approach another stopped at a traffi c light and then collide into
it, launching it a few feet forward. The objective ingredients are obviously
different. As is the overall affective tenor (about which more later). The
perceptual feeling of the continuing-across of movement, however, is
unmistakeably similar.
The two continuings share what Daniel Stern calls an “ activation contour ” :
a continuous rhythm of seamlessly linked accelerations and decelerations,
increases and decreases in intensity, starts and stops (Stern 1985, 57). The
linkage that is the perceptually felt movement has “ detached itself ” not
only from the balls in the fi rst combination, but from that combination
altogether. It has migrated from one objective combination to another,
neither of which it resembles in any observable way. What the linkage
108 Chapter 4
resembles in migration is only itself: its repeated rhythm. Internal to each
of the objective combinations, the unitary, perceptually-felt movement
qualifi es the nature of the event as a launching. Jumping across the gap
from one event to the next, it echoes itself in repetition. It resembles itself
across the gaps. Taken separately, each instance of its repetition resembles
not so much other events, as the echoing-itself. Behind, across, or through
repetition, the perceptually-felt movement exemplifi es itself as a species
of movement-feeling. It is now a self-exemplifying quality of movement
beholden to neither car nor ball, as indifferent to the cuestick as to the
traffi c light, inhabiting its own qualitative environment, in migratory
independence from any given context. Pure self-qualifying movement: an
autonomy of launching.
Double Ordering
The ability of a manner of movement to achieve qualitative autonomy in
repetition means that the double existence perceived in every change of
state extends into a double ordering of the world. On the one hand, it is
possible to follow the life-paths of objects as they move visibly from one
combination to another, and from one event to another. This serial, objec-
tive ordering, hinged on the visible form of the object, is what Michotte
calls a “ world-line ” (Michotte 1963, 16 – 17). World-lines bring identity to
difference : the object ’ s visible form is recognizably conserved across the
series of events composing its historic route.
It happens all the time that we jump from one world-line to another,
re-feeling an activation contour in its migratory independence as it reap-
pears in different objective combinations, from balls to cars to any number
of other things. It is possible to jump world-lines to “ yoke extremely
diverse events ” in perceptual feeling (Stern 1985, 58). This yoking can
operate across great distances in objective time and space. A nonsensuous
linkage, through its resemblance to itself, can bring an extreme diversity
of situations into proximity with each other according to the quality of
movement — the activation contour or shape of change — they nonsensu-
ously share. The nonsensuous similarity between distant events brings
changes — differencings — qualitatively together. World-lines bring identity
to difference. Nonsensuous similarity between world-lines bring differenc-
ings together . The yoking of events through nonsensuous similarity brings
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, First Movement 109
differencings together, cutting across world-lines and the identities con-
served along them. This transversal linkage between world-lines composes
a universe of migratory nonlocal linkage exhibiting an autonomous order
all its own: an order of manners of movement, of qualities of moving
experience. 2 This qualitative order doubles the objective order of the
world ’ s historic routes, self-detached from it. Unbeholden to it, it is freed
of objective constraints. This does not mean that it would be free from all
constraint. The qualitative order of experience has at least one major con-
straint all its own: its “ spontaneity. ”
Michotte insists that the felt-perceptions of movement-quality continu-
ing behind, across, and through objective encounters, of balls or cars or
anything else, are not learned. They arise spontaneously. They normally
go “ unrecognized, ” even if the objects involved are recognized. Or rather,
largely because the objects are recognized. The nonsensuous appearance of
the movement-quality as such, as a phenomenon sui generis, is back-
grounded by the reappearance of the object ’ s identity. Still, felt perceptions
of movement quality are operative in all circumstances. If they weren ’ t,
there would be no continuing-across of movement. The continuity of
movement that comes with nonsensuous perception would go unfelt,
fragmented into the discrete forms of the plurality of objects in combina-
tion. There would be no direct causal perception, no direct perception of
relation, no direct experience of change — only indirect logical association
(Michotte 1963, 19 – 20). There would be no experience of events as such.
Stern emphasizes that the activation contour, the nonlocal linkage consti-
tutive of the event, is a direct causal perception that normally operates
“ outside of awareness ” (Stern 1985, 52). Fundamentally, it is a noncon-
scious, operative “ trace ” (Michotte 1963, 19).
Amodal Reality
Stern makes the point that these operative traces are amodal , meaning they
are not in one sense mode or another. Nonsensuous, they can jump not just
between situations but also between sense modes. If the activation contour
that is the signature of the movement-quality is a rhythm of seamlessly
linked accelerations and decelerations, increases and decreases in intensity,
starts and stops, then the same activation contour experienced in the colli-
sion of two cars may also present itself, for example, in a coming together
110 Chapter 4
of musical notes. The operative traces that are activation contours are in no
way restricted to vision. They link events of vision to other-sense events.
“ Amodal ” is a more robust concept for this than the more usual “ cross-
modal transfer. ” The term cross-modal is used to refer to a “ transfer ”
between different sense modes — forgetting that what comes and goes
between them, what actively appears in their interstices as the perceptual
feeling of their co-occurring, is itself, strictly speaking, in no mode . It is the
direct perception of what happens between the senses, in no one mode.
All and only in their relation. Purely nonsensuous. Abstract. What is felt
abstractly is thought . The perceptual feeling of the amodal is the funda-
mentally nonconscious thinking-feeling of what happens between.
Now instead of thinking of the path of an object along a world-line,
think of a body traveling its life-path from situation to situation, recog-
nized object to recognized object, encounter to encounter. That life-path
is a world-line intersecting with those of objects, but following its own
orientation. At each encounter along the way, an activation contour non-
sensuously self-detaches. At each step, operative traces declare their inde-
pendence, making themselves amodally available for yoking diverse events,
across distances in space and time, and across registers of experience. Each
trace joins others, accumulating in a qualitative universe all their own.
Up until now in this account, there has been an implicit presupposition
of an already constituted subject of experience observing objects as they
encounter each other and enter into combination. In a word, there
has been a supposition of a self. But selves emerge . We are not born into
“ the ” world. We are thrown into world ing . Amodal experience, and the
qualitative universe of nonsensuous similarity it composes, are active
in the constitution of the self worlding. The qualitative order plays an
active role in that constitution. It participates in emergence. It plays an
ontogenetic role.
Form of Life
Stern discusses the ontogenetic role of amodal experience at a noncon-
scious level before there is a sense of self. “ For instance, in trying to soothe
an infant, the parent could say, ‘ There, there . . . , ’ giving more stress and
amplitude on the fi rst part of the word and trailing off toward the end of
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, First Movement 111
the word. Alternatively, the parent could silently stroke the baby ’ s back or
head with a stroke following the same activation contour as the ‘ There,
there ’ sequence, applying more pressure at the onset of the stroke and
lightening or trailing off toward the end. If the duration of the contoured
stroke and the pauses between strokes were of the same absolute and rela-
tive durations as the vocalization-pause pattern, the infant would experi-
ence similar activation contours no matter which soothing technique was
performed. The two soothings would feel the same (beyond their sensory
specifi city) ” (Stern 1985, 58). This is the onset of a spontaneous self-
organizing of experience . Instead of experiencing a spoken-word parent and
a separate stroking-touch parent, the two parenting events yoke together,
across their sensory, spatial, and temporal disparities, by virtue of the
nonsensuous similiarity of their activation contour. There is one seamless
soothing-parent. A new entity, the amodal parent-form, emerges as a func-
tion of the amodal activation contour, whose lived quality is affective (a
soothing).
The affective nature of the new form of life that emerges prompts Stern
to rename activation contours vitality affects . The world is not reducible to
the recognized ability of objective form to conserve its sensuous identity
in each of its serial appearings in different locations. On the contrary, that
ability is the product of another power: that of “ unrecognized, ” nonsensu-
ous, affective, linkages that bring “ extremely diverse ” nonlocal differences
together qualitatively. Affect brings form qualititatively to life.
Vitality affects give rise to forms of life that are fundamentally shared . 3
The soothing, like a launching, is a unitary continuing-across: from voice
to ear, hand to back, hearing to touching. It is all and only in the linkage,
which is the separate province of neither infant nor parent. The emergent
parent-form is in fact an amodal coming to life of the relation between
parent and child, through difference-yoking repetition.
Differential Attunement
The simplicity of Stern ’ s example masks the extent of the relational sharing.
The infant is not a passive recipient of the parent ’ s soothing. In a young
child, every experience is a whole-body experience. The child ’ s being
vibrates with the parent ’ s movements. Mouth gurgles, toes curl, eye blink
112 Chapter 4
then close, arms fl utter then still, in rhythm with the soothings. The child ’ s
movements have their own activation contour, across sense modalities of
taste, vision, tactility, and proprioception.
The child ’ s activation contour parallels that of the parent ’ s, in counter-
point . The child does not imitate the parent. What the child does bears no
resemblance to what the parent does. The child accompanies the parent, in
an orchestration of movements between their bodies. The parent ’ s move-
ments have an activation contour. The child ’ s have another. And the shared
experience has an encompassing activation contour in the pattern of
point-counterpoint passing between them. The overall activation contour
takes up the difference between the parent ’ s and the child ’ s movements
into its own complex unity of orchestration. This is what the two partici-
pants in the event share: differential involvement in the same event. A
relational sharing of what comes between, from different angles of inser-
tion into a single unfolding. A cross-embodied attunement of immediately
linked activations orchestrating a nondecomposable in-between (Stern
1985, 138 – 142).
The cross-embodied attunements are affective attunements. They are
affective in a broader sense than Stern ’ s defi nition of vitality affect as acti-
vation contour. The activation contour carries a qualitative fl avor that is
more than a movement-quality as such. Soothing is a quality of life-
experience that comes with the movements, but is not reducible to the
dynamic form that is their vitality affect. The relational quality of soothing
that comes with the overall activation contour is like an affective atmo-
sphere suffusing and surrounding the vitality affects involved. It is an
affective tonality . The vitality affect contributes a singular quality of liveness
to this event. The affective tonality expresses the kind of liveness that is
this event ’ s: its generic quality. It marks its species. The vitality affect is the
perceptual feeling of the region of being and becoming that the sharing
under way exemplifi es — a soothing versus a fright or frustration. Vitality
affect plus affective tonality make every form – of-life singular-generic. The
singularity refers to the “ just so ” of this event. The genericness is not to be
confused with the objective identity brought to difference following an
actual world-line. Rather, it refers to a diversity of events whose singular
just-so ’ s are directly, perceptually-felt to belong together, across any dis-
tance at which they might occur. It refers to the qualitative self-grouping
of events felt to belong to the same region of the universe of nonsensuous
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, First Movement 113
experience. The genericness of an event is with it from its fi rst occurrence.
It is the “ like this ” of the “ just so ” : a fore-echo of return. When once was
soothing, more may come. And that “ moreness ” is integral to the feeling
of what happened. 4
Affective tonality is an essential factor in making the event do what it
does and be what it was (Whitehead 1967a, 176, 180, 215 – 216). For it is
not inconceivable that the same activation contours that in this situation
add up to a soothing might under other circumstances participate in
another form of life, and come like a fright. The relational “ form of life ”
of which it is a question in any given instance is vitality affect plus affec-
tive tonality: indissociably both. The form of life being lived is composed
of their immediate, mutual inclusion in the event. The affective attun-
ement is thus not just between the component activation contours point-
counterpointing into a shared dynamic pattern. It is also the tuning into
each other, for this event, of the two affective dimensions of vitality affect
and affective tonality.
Affective attunement is transindividual (Simondon 2005, 251 – 253, 293 –
316). At this level, there is not yet an interaction between two selves. It is
all in the occurrent between. The word “ form ” — either in the special sense
of a form-of-life or in the more usual sense of an objective form — does not
yet apply to the pointing or counterpointing considered each on its own
side. It is only much later that the different angles of insertion into the
parental relation will diverge from each other and come to be experienced
by both parties as belonging to separate lives each with its own form. The
spontaneous constraint of life ’ s qualitative self-organization is that the
autonomy of movement upon which it is predicated counterindicates the
independence of the forms that originate from it. It is the separation of forms
that is learned — not their dynamic relations.
The child will eventually learn to separate out what it actually hears,
touches, and sees from what it perceptually feels amodally in the relational
in-between of bodies. The aural, tactile, visual (not to mention propriocep-
tive) sense-inputs on each side will be yoked together, yielding two oppos-
ing locuses of linkage. The activation contours on either side, parent and
child, will detach from their necessarily coming-together. They will
begin to diverge, following different life-paths: world-lines. What reappears
following each world-line will be recognized in different times and
places, involved with various combinations of objects. The recognized
114 Chapter 4
reappearances will solidify, across their variations, into two identities.
Objective organization comes, and with it the child ’ s sense of its own
independence as a separate, locally self-moving object vis- à -vis another: an
embodied self. The child separates into its own form-of-life, and its life no
sooner takes on objective weight, appearing even to itself as one object-
form among others. The spontaneous constraint of shared differentiation
in nonlocal linkage is slowly overcome. The stronger this objective orga-
nization of the world becomes, the more deeply will the cross-embodied
vitality affect that made it possible recede into the state of a trace. Its
operations will continue unaware, with, behind, across, and through the
world of objective forms populating life-paths.
Transindividual affective attunements will continue to resonate at every
encounter along the way, with new attunements forming at every age. The
nonsensuous perceptions with which they come will accompany all social
learning and all knowing. But they will remain largely nonconscious. 5
Reenaction
The adult is not so different from the child. More than a hundred years
before mirror neurons were discovered, James observed that every percep-
tion of a movement directly “ awakens in some degree the actual
movement ” perceived (James 1950, 526). “ Every possible feeling, ” James
continues, “ produces a movement, and that movement is a movement of
the entire organism, and of each of its parts ” (372). “ A process set-up any-
where reverberates everywhere ” (381). Whitehead similarly sites an instan-
taneous, all-absorbing “ reenaction ” as the initial phase of every occasion
(Whitehead 1967a, 192 – 194; Whitehead 1978, 237 – 238, 245). In what we
call thinking, the acting out of the movement is inhibited, resulting in
what Bergson calls a “ nascent action, ” or “ virtual movement. ” The nascent
action is the thought; thought is virtual movement (Bergson 1988, ch. 1).
Point, virtual counterpoint. The difference between the infant and the
adult is that the adult is capable of refraining from acting out its nascent
actions. The accomplishment of the adult is to gurgle virtually to a
soothing.
If we apply this to the examples of object perception used earlier, where
there seemed to be an implicit presupposition of a passive subject observ-
ing a scene, it is now clear that the “ spectator ” was as directly involved as
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, First Movement 115
the billiard balls or cars were. The spectator is just as absorbed in the col-
lision, on the level of his nascent actions. He is riveted into affective
attunement, in instantaneous reenaction. Action is only half the event:
action-reenaction; rhythm-reverberation; point, virtual counterpoint. Thus
everything that was just said of the parent-child relation applies to the
direct perception of change involving what we normally think of as con-
stituted objects entering into combination. What is happening is a new
occurrence of the primary coming-together in qualitative relation that,
ontogenetically speaking, is prior to any separation of self-identities fol-
lowing their individual world-lines. In every event of perception, there is
a differential co-involvement in the dynamic unity of one and the same
occurrence. The differential is between roles, or manners of direct involve-
ment in the event (active, reenactive; rhythmic, reverbatory). Every move-
ment has an activation contour, a rhythm of activity: vitality affect.
Affective tonality, for its part, comes with reenaction. It occurs between
the action and the reenaction, the rhythm and the reverberation, express-
ing their mutual inclusion in the same event. The affective tonality — the
excitement of dropping a billiard ball in a pocket, the fear of a car crash,
the soothe of a gesture — is no less a constitutive factor than the respective
events ’ activation contours. It comes fl ush with the instantaneous between
of their action-reenaction.
It is in fact the objective order of the world that fi rst “ detaches ” itself
from the multidimensioned affective/qualitative-relational order of experi-
ence to which it owes its emergence. The detachment of the qualitative-
relational order and the objective order is mutual. This means that the
separable forms that objectively co-populate the world are themselves
traces. Objects are traces of their own detachment from the order of imme-
diately attuned, affectively infl ected, direct perception that gave rise to
them. They continue nonconsciously to belong to that qualitative-rela-
tional order, and contribute to it, to the degree that they enter into new
combinations and the combinations change. Each new event retraces the
world ’ s qualitative order, even as it advances by a step the world ’ s objective
ordering. Each time we experience an event, we are nonconsciously return-
ing to our own and the world ’ s emergence. We are in re-worlding. We are
reattuning, and reindividualizing. The ontogenesis of forms of life contin-
ues. New attunements are added to the diversity of events that can be
yoked across distances in space and time. With each event, we are
116 Chapter 4
perceptually feeling the expansion of that universe of qualitative order, as
we simultaneously advance along a world-line. Each recognizable body or
object available for encounter stands for a potential next step down a
world-line. Doubling that step, it stands for a coming expansion of the
qualitative universe of directly felt relations through which separate forms
of life emerge-together in occurrent affective attunement. From this per-
spective, a body or object is a self-archiving of a universe of felt relation . Sepa-
rate forms are a tacit archive of shared and shareable experience.
Open-Range Abstraction
Language gives voice to the archive. It makes it possible to move and share
felt relations at any distance from the sensuous object-forms they yoke.
Words are by nature nonlocally linked to their formal meaning, since they
can be repeated anywhere and anytime. Words also yoke to other words,
in a “ chain of derivations . . . whereby the local relations ” and their sense-
perceived meanings may in the end be “ entirely lost. ” At the limit, lan-
guage can “ suppress intermediate links ” and operate only with nonlocal
linkages (Whitehead 1985, 83). It was said earlier that it was possible to
jump from one world-line to another. Language makes it possible to jump
world-lines, or jump ahead on a world-line, skipping over objectively nec-
essary intermediate steps. Language is the very technique of skipping
intermediaries. Skipped “ intermediaries ” is also a concept James uses in
connection with the affective/qualitative-relational order of felt abstrac-
tion with which language operates (James 1996a, 175; James 1978,
247 – 248).
What is the directly perceived “ self-detachment ” of a nonsensuous
similarity from a set of objective conditions if not a lived abstraction ? What
is lived abstraction if not thought? Language, skipping intermediaries, takes
up the thought-felt abstraction of nonsensuous experience into its own
movement. This intensifi es the autonomy of nonsensuous perception by
incalculably increasing the range of its potential yoking between extremely
diverse events. “ The paths that run through conceptual experiences, that
is, through ‘ thoughts ’ or ‘ ideas ’ that ‘ know ’ the things in which they ter-
minate, are highly advantageous paths to follow. Not only do they yield
inconceivably rapid transitions; but, owing to the ‘ universal ’ character
which they frequently possess, and to their capacity for association with
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, First Movement 117
each other in great systems, they outstrip the tardy consecutions of the
things in themselves, and sweep us on towards our ultimate termini in a
far more labor-saving way than following of trains of sensible perception
ever could ” (James 1996a, 64).
Thought, taken up in language, raises the affective autonomy of the
qualitative-relational order constitutive of forms of life to a higher power.
Language is a labor-saving machine for accelerating and intensifying life
activity, thought-skipping the “ tardy consecutions ” of sensuous percep-
tions. Language is a thought-machine for adding nonsensuous degrees of
freedom to activity. It is a machine for remixing world-lines, skipping us
down the lines and cross-jumping us from one line to another. This remix
ability enlarges the parameters for the reindividuation of forms of life,
beginning from the nonsensuous traces of the affective/qualitative-
relational realm and moving back into the sensuous realm of actual action
among sense-perceived objects.
James, however, goes on to say that “ ninety-nine times out of a hundred ”
our ideas are actually “ unterminated perceptually. ” It is only as an excep-
tion that our thinking effectively reenters the objective order of things to
reach a sensuous terminus. It continues on its own path, past the sensuous,
making termini thought-felt only in order to keep on moving on. “ To
continue, ” he writes, “ is the substitute for knowing ” in the “ completed ”
sensuous sense (James 1996a, 69). Thought keeps on skipping, with the all
the rapidity language can muster. It keeps on living nonsensuous abstrac-
tion ’ s moving on.
Whitehead remarked that in the highly abstractive movement of lan-
guage, nonsensuous perceptions may detach so thoroughly from objects
that the “ sense-perceived meanings ” are entirely lost. Crucial for the
present account, the direct perception of their relations is not lost. Direct
perception of relational qualities of movement and change continues with
the movement of language. Affective attunement continues. The nonsen-
suous universe of life ’ s qualities of relation goes on expanding. The living
of life ’ s abstraction goes on going on.
As taken up in language, the thinking-feeling that is nonsensuous per-
ception is exonerated from having to move with the actual displacements
of the ongoing event matrix that is the body, as it follows its path through
the world. Now the thinking-feeling can follow the fl ow of words, freed
from objective constraints. The infi nitely rapidly permutating fl ow of
118 Chapter 4
words removes all limits to nonlocal linkage: open-range abstraction. This
is what is called “ thinking. ” When we pause to think, this is what we ’ re
doing: continuing life abstractly. Intensely.
It is paramount to be clear about this: the world is never lost in thought.
Neither is the world ’ s order lost. What is taken up in language is precisely
the qualitative-relational orderings of the objective world: the nonlocal
linkages and affective attunements that are the perceptually-felt dynamic
form of what happens. Language takes them up. As its moves, the quali-
tative-relational order of the world moves with it. World-lines permute.
It is always possible, it goes without saying, to go astray in words. Lan-
guage infi nitely augments our powers to delude ourselves. But what lan-
guage does with respect to abstraction can in no way be reduced to delusion.
It also enables truth.
Foretracing
James defi nes “ truth ” as a linguistic procedure consisting in skipping inter-
mediaries in such a way that they can be reconstituted in actual movement ,
given the conditions. This is what he means by “ termination ” (see chapter
1 on the terminus and the virtual in James). To truly say where a certain
university campus building is, when it is not immediately present in local
relation and lacks “ sense-perceived meaning, ” is to enable oneself or
another to go there and terminate the speaking-thinking of it in a sensuous
perception satisfying the tending-toward. Truth doesn ’ t represent things.
It detaches from them — in order to go back among them. It is “ ambula-
tory ” (James 1978, 245 – 247). Language is the potential for an abstractly
initiated movement to terminate in an anticipated sense-perception, no
less than it is the potential to go astray in the world by dint of detachment
from sense-perception.
What James calls the “ meaning of truth ” — the true meaning of words —
is the pragmatic potential to begin a movement nonsensuously and termi-
nate it in a sense-perception satisfying an anticipation. This is likely what
Benjamin had in mind in the opening quotes of this chapter when he said
that what is meant is the sensible. Taken out of context, Benjamin ’ s
statement might be taken to endorse the reductive view of language accord-
ing to which its operation essentially boils down to a one-to-one corre-
spondence between words and things. James ’ s observation that the
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, First Movement 119
correspondence is left at odd ends ninety-nine percent of the time seriously
skews the putative symmetry between language and its sense validation,
scrambling any unambiguous anchoring of language and thought in ref-
erential function. The relation of language to the sensible, even in the rare
cases it does terminate, is not fundamentally referential, but demonstra-
tive: that way; there we go; this is it. Words point-toward, in active tending,
more than they pin down, in logically fi xed designation (James 1996a, 55).
“ Pure demonstration, ” however, “ is impossible, ” Whitehead says (1964,
10). (Oddly, he also uses the challenge of fi nding a campus building as an
example of a terminus — evidence perhaps of philosophers ’ legendary pro-
pensity to lose themselves in thought). Pure demonstration is impossible,
according to Whitehead, because a demonstrative gesture always takes
place against an inexhaustible background of shared presuppositions.
Without a tacit truncation of what is meant, the tending-toward would get
lost in a thicket of complicating detail. It is necessary to skip potential
intermediaries all the more concertedly, in order to get anywhere with
language. The impossibility of pure demonstration, Whitehead observes,
means that demonstration is always essentially speculative (Whitehead
1964, 6). Language has more fundamentally to do with speculation than
designation, or any form of one-to-one correspondence between words and
things. There is always, implied in a linguistic gesture and the thinking it
advances, the tacit complication of an ambulation — the potential unfold-
ing of an event against a weltering background. “ Thus the ultimate fact
for sense-awareness is the event ” (Whitehead 1964, 15). The ultimate fact —
the truth — is the event and the welter of potential steps it navigates.
The speculative nature of language is underlined by James ’ s remark that
in the ambulatory meaning-and-truth process any actual movements
advancing meaningfully along world-lines present themselves fi rst virtu-
ally, in a pre-thinking-speaking of their terminus. Language projects
world-lines in advance of themselves. It foretraces . Truthsaying is the lan-
guage-assisted translation of virtually thought-felt foretracings into actu-
ally followed action-paths. If the action-path terminates in sense-perception
as the tending-toward speculatively anticipated, it is because the unfolding
event has succeeded in navigating the welter of the world. The event ’ s
unfolding has accomplished a preoriented selection of intermediary link-
ages advancing stepwise through sensuous experience, aided at every turn
by a backgrounded universe of unspoken, barely thought presuppositions.
120 Chapter 4
At each step, the event ’ s unfolding doubles the complexity of its thought-
ambulation with speculatively demonstrative sense-perceptions. Language
can as effectively return us to the sensuous world as it can detach us from
it in thoughts unterminated and interminable. In fact, the two operations
are one: double existence. Two sides of the same speculative-pragmatic
coin.
The Making of Truths Foretold
The ambulatorily-challenged professor can and does get lost in thought
and the meanders of language, as we all do at times. The pragmatic-truth
potential of language is sometimes weltered-out by the backgrounded
crowd of virtual paths and termini coming undemonstratively to the fore.
When the event falls too heavily on the speculative side of the coin, we
lose the ability to follow through a particular tending-toward to its sensible
terminus in stepwise attunement to selectively demonstrative sense-
perception. We are lost in too-open-range foretracing. We — our events ’
unfoldings — are absorbed in speculation. The selectively oriented segueing
from virtual foretracing to sensibly sign-posted ambulation is in suspense.
Tending-toward does not sensuously terminate. Rather than ambulating,
it ambles on. This is imagination: suspended ambulation. In imagination,
we are speculatively absorbed in a universe of nascent actions whose ter-
minus-tending unfolding is inhibited. We are free-range navigating the
nonsensuous side of the world ’ s double ordering.
This ambling navigating of the nonsensuous side can end up in delu-
sion. This occurs when it is forgotten that the event unfolding is a suspen-
sion of ambulation, and premature conclusions about sensuous termini are
drawn in the absence of the stepwise conditions for their demonstrative
fulfi llment. It is not the free-range ambling on the nonsensuous side that
is delusional. What is delusional is taking the ambling for a good-enough
substitute for an effective ambulation, forgetting that pure demonstration
is impossible. Delusion is not a disorder of the imagination, or of thought
per se. It is a defective expression of the positive power of thought-as-
imagination to free-range foretrace, with the meanderings of language.
Delusion is in fact a disorder of the language factor involved. We are delu-
sional when we forget that the operation of language is not essentially one
of designation, that it is never purely demonstrative. We are delusional
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, First Movement 121
when we forget that there is always, essentially, a speculative aspect to
language. We are delusional when we forget the double existence of the
world: the immediate abstraction ingredient to every experience, the skip-
ping of intermediaries that is always eventfully afoot in one way or another
listing our movements to one side or the other of the world ’ s double order-
ing, or terminally attuning them to each other.
To be delusional is to forget that language and thought, as they virtually
go together, are creative . 6 Relieved of the immediate imperative to termi-
nate in the world sensuously, free to range as openly as words are wont to
do, the thought-movements initiated by speculation in its imaginative
usage are enabled to invent world-lines previously unheard-of and never
before seen. These invented world-lines might, as part of some later adven-
ture, turn out to be terminatable in sense-perception, proving themselves
pragmatically true after all. In the meantime, they remain as virtual as the
nascent actions they string together in thought, as free as a word. 7
This signals a second-degree “ meaning of truth ” : the pragmatic poten-
tial to invent ways of terminating movements that were initiated nonsen-
suously in action-paths yet to be seen, world-lines unheard-of. This is the
constructive meaning of truth: the paths leading to a sensuous termination
of the movement begun in thought and language must be brought about.
They must be made . Their making means that the constructive truth is no
less pragmatic than truth in the fi rst, ambulatory, sense. It is speculatively
pragmatic with the emphasis squarely on the speculative: intrepidly future-
facing, far-rangingly foretracing.
Powers of the False
Mobilizing intrepidly future-facing creative thought-powers of language,
in a mode we might categorize as purely imaginative (literature) or purely
speculative (philosophy), is a political act: constructive of alternate future
paths for the world that extend its qualitative-relational universe of life
and the forms of life that potentially co-compose through it. Language,
seen from this perspective, harbors what Deleuze calls “ powers of the false ”
(Deleuze 1989, 126 – 155, 274 – 175). He infl ects “ false ” away from “ errone-
ous, ” toward “ not yet. ” Powers of the false as yet correspond to no truth,
for the simple reason that they produce truths. This power is “ false ” also in
the sense that a thinking-feeling, without the actual feeling, is the
122 Chapter 4
semblance of an event. As indicated in the opening citations from Benja-
min, semblance is another word for nonsensuous similarity.
Another way of approaching this is to say that through the activity of
language, the directly felt qualities of experience present in bodies and
objects in nonsensuous trace-form can cross over into each other with
greatest of ease, incomparably increasing the world ’ s potential for self-
organizing. The activity of language involves a becoming-active of nonlo-
cal perceptual linkages in their own nonsensuous right. The more active
they are in their own right, the greater the number of directly felt-
connections they can muster among themselves. This expands their aggre-
gate relational potential. More events, more distantly related in actuality,
come into each other ’ s orbit. Their coming into each other ’ s orbit can be
repeated in words, and varied with verbal permutations. The ever-varied
repetitions invent new permutations on abstract thinking-feeling.
This is entailed by the doctrine of reenaction discussed above: the sen-
sible production of a word reenacts a nonsensuous attunement event. The
reenaction is in nascent action. A nascent action is the reenaction of a
tendency to action. Tendential reenaction recedes by degrees to the limit of
the virtual: a tendency to reenact a tendency is itself a reenaction. As is a
tendency to reeenact a tendency to reenact a tendency — ad infi nitum. The
virtual limit, never actually reached, is where the feeling side of the think-
ing-feeling of language tendentially fades out. The last traces of the sensible
go mute, leaving pure unverbalized thought. Reenaction purifi ed of any
trace of sense modality: pure amodal reality. No longer beholden to the
empirical order of the senses, thought, at the limit, throws off the shackles
of reenaction. It becomes directly enactive — of virtual events. It becomes
purely, virtually active, producing nonsensuous similarities: activation con-
tours never felt, but already virtually reverberating; abstract dynamic forms
of future-feeling; vitality affects awaiting encounter. Language cannot
reach this directly future-feeling limit of thought. But in imagination, it
can approach it. When it does, words resonate with virtual thought-events
lying on the linguistic horizon. Language fore-echoes with amodal inven-
tion. It vibrates with nonsensuously inventive activity. It becomes-active
in resonance with pure thought. It is this partnership with pure thought
that makes language the “ most complete archive ” of “ semblances in which
nothing ” — that is, pure thought, pure amodal reality — “ appears. ”
The creative power of language resides in its capacity to echo in its own
operation virtual events lying amodally on its horizon. The infi nite
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, First Movement 123
permutation ability built into the operation of language expands the
world ’ s repertory of nonlocal linkage to a degree that sensuous forms could
never achieve linearly following the world-lines of their actual encounters.
The ambulatory potential that language also has to foretrace world-lines
gives pure thought a pragmatic issue in the actual world that it does not
have on its own. Being infi nitely recessive, left to its own devices it moves
farther and farther in the other direction, toward furthest horizons of
amodal reality. Without language — or a nonverbal resonation machine for
virtual events (of which, as we will see, there are many) — the archive of
experience would be full of nothing appearing to the absolute limit,
without so much as a semblance. Void of thought.
The inventive power of language depends on techniques of existence :
techniques to channel the activity of pure thought toward an issue in the
sensuous world, through which the world becomes. Speech is one such
technique. Writing is another. The differences between them as techniques
of existence are crucial to take into account, but are beyond the purview
of this essay, which has a date with the weather to keep.
Produced Resemblance
Nonsensuous similarity has nothing to do with an analogy based on resem-
blance. An invented virtual event has no model to contour itself to. It can,
under certain ambulatory conditions, contour actual events to itself,
although not in any one-to-one correspondence. If there is a resemblance,
it is pragmatically produced, like a truth (Benjamin 1996a).
The principle that resemblance is produced applies to the linkage
between two sensuous events as well. The sensuous experience of the word
“ storm ” does not resemble what happens in the sky; any more than the
sight of a dancing body resembles a downpour, or an undulation of hands
a billowing of clouds. The dance and the storm are nonsensuously similar
in that between them they co-compose a joint activation contour of dif-
ferential attunement to the same event. As we have already seen, the
affective attunement is amodal. It is their nonsensuous similarity. It is their
analogy. The nonsensuous similarity is a being of analogy occurring in
the in-between event of the two component events ’ coming abstractly
together. It is invented by the technique of existence effecting that coming-
together: in the events alluded to by Benjamin, that technique of existence
is ritual.
124 Chapter 4
The nonsensuous similarity produced by a bringing-abstractly-together
of two component sensuous events results from the echoing of the events
in each other, within or across sense modalities. This is possible because
the movement-qualities of each component event are already in nonlocal
linkage, just as the launching quality of colliding billiard balls or cars was.
The dancing body and the storm are self-abstracting in the way Michotte
describes: their movement-quality self-detaches from the sensuously regis-
trable combination of objects involved. Thus all that is needed is a nonlo-
cal linkage between nonlocal linkages: their mutual inclusion in a joint
event. As we also saw earlier, what constitutes a mutual inclusion of this
kind is the affective tonality enveloping the disparate movement-qualities,
or vitality affects. It is the affective tonality that produces the resemblance
between the events, by holding them together in itself. It makes the sin-
gularity of the activation contours of the two distant events come generi-
cally together in a ritual event. The job of the technique of existence of
ritual is to set the conditions in place for an affective tonality to be pro-
duced and, in appearing, to produce the singular-generic event of a dance
and a storm ritually coming-together in nonsensous similarity.
The nonlocal linkage between nonlocal linkages that is at the heart of
this operation was just analyzed in terms of thought and language. Ritual
is a way of performing thought. It is a technique of existence for bringing
forth virtual events through techniques involving bodily performance, in
mutual inclusion with events of the other kinds. Events, for example, of
the heavens, of a cosmological kind. Ritual resonates with virtual events,
as the operation of language does. Ritual gestures forth virtual events from
the horizon of thought. Language speaks or writes them. The techniques
ritual employs to set the conditions for virtual events to appear involve
language use of many kinds. But ritual ’ s ability to mobilize affective tonal-
ity in order to nonsensuously link nonsensuous linkages to each other
hangs specifi cally on the performative use of language — language as gesture .
Nonverbal gesture, however, can do the trick just as well, if the conditions
for set for it. 8
Visionary Semblance
The fundamentally gestural nature of ritual means that the affective tonal-
ity of the event attaches most directly to proprioceptive experience
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, First Movement 125
(experience that is self-referencing, registering its own unfolding as its only
content; as opposed to the exteroception of sensory experience registering
impulses from the outside that are in principle outwardly referenceable to
objects). The in-between of activation contours is directly kinesthetic. It
consists in an immediate echoing of action in reenaction, in an in-between
of movements. Action-reenaction is kinesthetic, and kinesthesia is proprio-
ceptive. It references the relation of the phases of an unfolding movement
to each other — its accelerations and decelerations, increases and decreases
in intensity, starts and stops — as belonging to the same event. Propriocep-
tion is not one sense mode among others. It is the mode of experience of
the amodal as such. The whole concept of the activation contour is that the
“ same ” contour is to be found across modes, in the rhythm of seeing, or
touching, or hearing. Rhythm is amodal. It is the abstract shape of the event
as it happens, across whatever modes it happens with. It is the immediate
thinking-feeling of nonlocal linkage. Rhythm is the amodal in person.
Now that we have seen the extent to which the “ sameness ” of move-
ment-qualities is a creative production, we can appreciate that propriocep-
tion is natively inventive. It is the body ’ s in-born technique for the
production of nonsensuous similarity. The body ’ s automatic abstraction
method. It operates “ spontaneously ” under all “ natural ” conditions, as
well as in the laboratory. If it didn ’ t, it is worth repeating, there would be
no experience of events. There would be no experience of change or rela-
tion. Proprioception is not only abstracting. It is self-abstracting: it is by
nature recessive, always already slipping away behind the other sense
modes to the nonconscious limit of experience, where sensuous experience
rejoins the pure activity of thought (Massumi 2002, 58 – 61, 168, 179 – 188).
All techniques of existence bringing forth virtual events work with pro-
prioception and its privileged connection with thought.
According to Susanne Langer, ritual is a technique for bringing forth
virtual events, nonsensuously yoking diverse events of the bodies and the
heavens. Ritual produces a semblance of an event in which nothing pro-
prioceptively appears — but is nevertheless seen. The ritual dancer “ sees the
world in which his body dances ” (Langer 1953, 197). Ritual technique
performs virtual events furthering vision beyond where it actually stops
and behind where it continues, into other, cosmological, worlds that are
really, virtually, nonsensuously felt to double the sensuous world. Ritual
produces a perceptual feeling of seen cosmological spaces. Its gesturality is
126 Chapter 4
visionary. It involves proprioception in the invention of a virtual event of
vision, of a cosmologically spatializing kind. Ritual technique produces a
cosmological semblance of a spatializing event of vision, perceptually felt
at a point of indistinction with cosmological thinking.
Semblance of a Truth (in Double)
This perceptual feeling in vision of spaces thought-seen beyond the sensu-
ous ken of sight might be dismissed as a mere hallucination — were it not
for the years of hard training, the practiced technique, and the meticu-
lously prepared collective context necessary for the event of its perfor-
mance. If this is hallucination, it is not “ just ” a hallucination. It is a
collective availing of the creative powers of the false incumbent in all
experience. It is less a hallucination in the pejorative sense than an invoked
relational reality . That is what ritual does: it invokes into occurring a col-
lectively shared nonsensuous experience of a cosmological kind. This is a
speculative dance of the imagination: a cosmological semblance of a truth ,
abstractly lived, with all due amodal intensity.
An abstractly lived truth of this kind may in fact fi nd ways to ambulate
along actual world-lines, to terminate in sensuous experience that would
not have been possible by any other route: a renewal or a healing; a war-
avoiding or a peace-making; a renegotiating of relations of reciprocity and
power. The virtual events of ritual are not without their pragmatic truth
potential. They are not only shared, but have their own effi cacity. The
intensity of the affective tonality with which they envelop vitality affects
may effectively carry truth-producing powers. The relational reality invoked
may foretrace world-lines whose terminations positively come to pass. If,
that is, the bodies attuned to each other and to the cosmological realm in
which they are co-implicated by the ritual are so moved, nonsensuously.
This production of ritual truth is accomplished as if by magic, through
suggestion : the suggestive force of the shared nonsensuous experience. A
semblance of a cosmological truth carries “ magical ” power to move bodies
without objectively touching them, and to make things happen without
explicitly ordering the steps to be followed, as long as the conditions have
been set in place with the appropriate intensity of affective tonality, and
with the necessary technical precision. That this process is suggestive
makes its truth-producing no less real, no less effective, no less technical,
no less pragmatic, no less terminally true.
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, Second Movement 127
SECOND MOVEMENT: LIFE UNLIMITED
Semblance of a Truth (in Depth)
Language may be the most complete archive of nonsensuous similarity,
but the technique of ritual shows that it is eminently possible to activate
and disseminate relation by predominately nonverbal means. It was
said earlier that objective forms are the sensuous traces of essentially
nonsensuous qualitative-relational experience. It follows that any differ-
ential attuning of sensuous forms to each other is a way of performing
virtual events, permuting or inventing nonsensuous similarities, and
producing speculatively pragmatic truths, or semblances that foretrace
them. Sensuous forms may also constitute an “ archive ” of relational
experience.
Susanne Langer treats forms as mundane as perspective painting in just
this way. In a painting, “ everything which is given at all is given to vision ”
(Langer 1953, 73). But we perceive more than we see. We see surface but
perceptually feel depth. Thus there must be in the painting “ visible sub-
stitutes for nonvisible ingredients in space experience ” : “ things that are
normally known by touch or [the proprioceptive sense of] movement ”
(ibid.). This couching of nonvisible trace experiences in visible form can
only be achieved if the artist “ departs ” from “ direct imitation ” (ibid.). The
artist must falsify vision in just the right way to produce an effective inclu-
sion in the visible of what cannot be seen. In other words, she must paint
not the visible resemblances her eyes see in sensuous form, but rather the
nonsensuous similarity between vision and other-sense events that yoke
together amodally in movements through space. If painted with enough
artifi ce, their linkage will be activated even in the actual absence of the
movements and spaces to which they belong. The painting archives
amodal, nonlocal linkages that operate through vision but are not
contained by it.
Because of the necessary falsifi cation involved, Langer calls the sem-
blance of space an “ illusion. ” But she also emphasizes the extreme “ arti-
fi ce, ” the mastery of technique, necessary to “ construct ” the semblance.
One philosopher ’ s illusion is another ’ s produced truth. Perhaps we can
halve the difference and say in this case truth-likeness . Unless and until the
art-constructive process prolongs or initiates tendencies toward new path-
making activity in the world, becoming political in its own inimitable
128 Chapter 4
aesthetic way, what it has produced remains a semblance of a truth con-
cerning space and movement (see chapter 2).
The experience of space we feel when we view a painting, Langer
emphasizes, is a real experience of space and the potential movements it
affords. It ’ s just that the space is virtual. Visible form has been used as a
local sign (James 1950, 155 – 165) of nonlocal linkages. The function of the
local sign is catalytic. A sensuous form has activated the formation of
a “ created . . . virtual form ” (Langer 1953, 172, 173). The canvas,
pigment, and frame that are actually seen are the local signs hosting the
semblant event.
Perspective painting is like ritual in that it produces an experience in
vision of a spatialized virtual event. The virtual space of perspective paint-
ing, in contrast to ritual space, is fundamentally this-worldly, projecting a
geometric formalization of the empirical order. Think of landscape paint-
ing. Through the device of the vanishing point, the perspective order
producing the perceptual feeling in vision of depth is posited to continue
out through the painting. The painting projects, beyond its frame, an
extensive continuum that virtually rejoins the actual spatial order of the
unpainted world within which its frame is nested. Perspective painting in
this way posits its virtual event-space as as-good-as-actual — while in no way
hiding the rigorous artifi ce necessary to produce this effect (though the
salience of the event ’ s artifi ciality may later subside, through processes of
habituation and conventionalization, if not through an ideological project
of normalization).
A produced virtual event that mobilizes its power of the false to posit
itself as as-good-as-actual is “ representational. ” The semblance of truth
produced by representational techniques is a semblance of the empirically
real , according to a defi nition of the empirical that equates it with the
objective order. The aim to equal the empirically real foregrounds the
element of produced resemblance — while disavowing it. The brush strokes
through which a landscape is nonsensuously seen do not objectively
resemble a pasture, any more than the word “ storm ” objectively resembles
what happens in the sky, or a dancing body a downpour. The resem-
blance — like all resemblances — is produced, by essentially dissimilar means.
This is lost from view in representational art.
A representational technique of existence foregrounds the produced
resemblance to particular effect in the kind of semblance it creates. It
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, Second Movement 129
foregrounds the resemblance in a way that suggests that it actually stands
behind the painting producing it, authorizing it, and guaranteeing its
truth-likeness. A perceptual feeling is produced that the seen resemblance
is the founding principle of the semblance. This glosses over the differen-
tial nature of the attunement between senses, between the sensuous and
the nonsensuous, and between spatiality and movement potential, upon
which the semblance ’ s appearance depends. The principle of resemblance
privileges the sensuous forms, divorced from this background of differen-
tial attunement. The resemblance is felt to be entirely between sensuous
forms. The virtually occurrent, nonsensuous qualitative-relational order is
outshone by a resemblance whose production could not have occurred
without it.
The nonsensuous qualitative-relational order is replaced by a formal
order : the geometric order of perspective. The geometric order exhibits
itself in the perceptual event performed by the painting. It is also used
to formalize techniques for the construction of perspectival paintings. The
geometric order comes before as technique, as well as being exhibited
with it. Coming before and with, it appropriates the event of the painting
to itself. The geometric order is felt. It is a lived abstraction. But it is felt-
not to be an event. It is posited by the experience as an a priori: an
eternally preexisting, abstract frame; a transcendent abstraction rather
than an integrally lived abstraction. It is this transcendent abstraction
that purports to be foundational, and its purporting to be foundational
authorizes and guarantees the produced resemblance. This makes the
resemblance appear not only necessary but “ natural. ” The resemblance is
made to be refl ective of an eternal, necessary, natural order. That order
arrogates the abstraction of the painting to itself. The lived abstraction
of the qualitative-relational order of nonsensuous similarity, its ever-occur-
rent contingency and spontaneity, is lost in the refl ected glare. The resem-
blance is now guaranteed to be between sensuous forms. The resemblance
between natural forms is authorized to be a “ natural ” refl ection of a
necessary transcendent order. Since the eternal order of transcendent
abstraction is posited as the principle behind the resemblance, the resem-
blance stands in its refl ection as in principle unproduced. Perspective in
representational painting produces a semblance of unproduced resem-
blance exhibiting itself as the natural order of sensuous objects: the objec-
tive order of sensuous forms.
130 Chapter 4
The painting is experienced as formally “ refl ecting ” the truth of an
objective order within its frame: in its sensuous content. The frame of
painting closes on the sensuous scene it contains, even as the scene refl ects
an abstract frame so transcendently wide open as to encompass the entirety
of the objective world in its principle of order. This opening onto the world
beyond the painting ’ s frame — the “ window ” on the world and its a priori
order the painting makes appear — is purely formal (Panofsky 1991, 27). It
is abstract in a purely formalist sense. A formal abstraction is one which
produces an opening onto the whole world through refl ective closure. 9 The
speculative-pragmatic truth that the painting is a semblance of a truth
(participating in the world ’ s worlding), and not a refl ection of the truth (of
the world ’ s objective already-thereness), is windowed out of view. A repre-
sentational semblance of a truth is one that denies that it is one. It pro-
duces a semblance of a not being a semblance. This is what is often called
“ realism ” in art.
The nonsensuously lived order, analyzed in this essay as “ doubling ” the
ordering of objects as a universe of qualitative relation furthering experi-
ence through inventive events of becoming, is real but nonrepresenta-
tional and nonobjective . It is moving, occurrent, affective, qualitative,
relational, potentializing, becoming, spontaneous. It is self-abstracting
from the objective order, in continual, moving, intensely perceptually felt
excess over it. It is more than objectively real. It can never be contained
within a frame. It is never reducible to the sensuous content of any framing
of experience. It is not refl ective of the objective order. It is self-detaching
from it. It is the immediately lived reality of the objective order ’ s spontane-
ity, in encounter and eventful transformation: its changeability. Its creativ-
ity. Its semblance as immediately lived abstraction, directly perceptually
felt, unauthorized and without guarantee. Purely occurrent.
If perspective painting is illusionary, it is only in this sense: that the
semblance it produces, produces a semblance of not being one.
Departing from the Semblance of Depth
There are practices of painting and drawing that which disturb the sem-
blance-of-not-being-a-semblance of realist art while retaining something
of perspective and representational content. This is accomplished by
making felt the fact noted by Langer that nonvisible reality can be made
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, Second Movement 131
to appear in vision, that nonsensuous similarity can be made to perform
itself through sensuous form, only if the technique departs from what has
come to be experienced as direct imitation. The departure, more or less
subtle, is from techniques reenforcing the habitual, conventional, or nor-
malized experience of the artifact ’ s semblance-of-not-being-a-semblance.
The departure from the representationally reigning techniques creates a
crack in the window through which the artifact ’ s powers of false show, in
perceptual feeling.
Take portraiture. Paul Val é ry, discussing Degas ’ s portrait drawing prac-
tice, writes that “ the peculiar alteration that an artist ’ s manner of executing
. . . makes the exact representation suffer ” exerts a “ power of transposition ”
altering the “ manner of seeing ” incumbent in the drawing. The drawing ’ s
manner of seeing “ signifi cantly extends itself to include: manner of being,
being able, knowing, wanting ” (Val é ry 2003b, 206 – 207). In a word: it
extends itself into a form-of-life. The “ drawing is not the form, ” if by that
is meant a visibly sensuous form (Val é ry 2003b, 205). The form-of-life
departs from the drawing in that sense of form.
When a human form is taken as a point of departure, the drawing is
the appearing of a complex form of life: a multiplicity of vitality affects
are mutually included in an event of vision, enveloped in the affective
tonality of the sight of the drawing, and appearing virtually to “ reconsti-
tute someone ” (Val é ry 2003ba, 207). The more exact the representation, the
more “ detestable ” the drawing (Val é ry 2003cb, 81). The more intense the
perceptual feeling of form-of-life, the more successful the drawing. And
paradoxically, the more intense the perceptual feeling, the more impersonal
the drawing becomes ( “ someone ” ). The reconstitution is not of a particular
“ someone, ” since the drawing has taken great pains to depart from any
such focus on representing. The “ peculiar alteration ” the drawing suffers
makes it commit a “ personal error ” (Val é ry 2003ba, 207; emphasis in the
original). It makes an art that is purportedly of the personal, creatively
“ err ” in that apparent vocation. It makes a self-respecting semblance of
it again.
In chapter 3, the drawing of a peculiar alteration which exerts a power
of transposition that creatively extends a manner of seeing into a form-of-
life, understood as a complex manner of being/being able/knowing/
wanting appearing eventfully together in virtual mutual inclusion, was
termed a diagram (Deleuze 2004b, 81 – 90). The diagram was considered a
132 Chapter 4
technique of existence. Conversely, every technique of existence can be
considered a diagram. Val é ry treats Degas ’ s drawing as a diagram. Deleuze
corroborates Val é ry ’ s main point: “ the suprasensible diagram is not to be
confused with the audio-visual archive ” (Deleuze 1988a, 84, translation
modifi ed). It “ doubles ” the order of sensuous forms and their history with
a “ becoming of forces ” (manners of being/being capable/knowing/wanting)
(Deleuze 1988a, 85; translation modifi ed). Semblance and diagram-as-tech-
nique-of-existence go doubly, becoming together.
Every vitality affect is a relational form-of-life. Left to their own devices,
they are partial: they self-detach from the objects-in-combination impli-
cated in the event. The combination of objects is only a part of what is
objectively present since the encounter occurs against a background of
other combinations whose own dynamic form is not positively doubled
by the nonsensuous trace created. The dynamic form of the encounter
stands out from them, in semblance. The partiality of the semblance ’ s
standing out is self-selective: spontaneous, autonomous.
“ Realistic ” portrait drawings that fail to “ err personally ” bind a complex
of vitality affects together into the semblance of a whole, in disrespect of
their partiality and the autonomous self-selecting of their standing-out.
The sensuous form from which the semblance of the whole detaches is the
tip of a nonsensuous iceberg. An unseen depth of personality is perceptu-
ally felt “ behind ” the semblance. This suggested depth of personality
replaces the actual background of the experiential event of the drawing.
Once again, resemblance appears as a founding principle. This time, it is
the resemblance of the partial view of the person presented by the drawing
to the unseen whole: a self-resemblance. The autonomous partiality of
vitality affect is subordinated to a suggested whole whose showing sensu-
ous tip is seen as its dependent part. The part seen is nonsensuously owned.
Its selectivity is wholly integrated.
The principle of resemblance in this case — the self-resemblance of the
dependent part to the owning whole — is authorized and guaranteed by no
objective order. There is indeed an order, and it is again felt to be transcen-
dent. But now it is a subjective order. The portrait is a “ window ” on the
soul. The perceptually felt content of the portrait is an inner landscape
where the truth of the soul resides. The picture is of self-transcendence,
the truth of personal soulfulness. The drawing purports to truly harbor
content. The frame of the drawing contains an inner landscape of
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, Second Movement 133
unplumbable depth. Its sensuous closure opens onto a whole subjective
world. The drawing is as-good-as subjectively real. The semblance that
effectively appears once again purports not to be one. Rather than assum-
ing its status of nonsensuous similarity tuned to real differentials, it sub-
ordinates itself to a subjective principle of self-identity. Instead of making
felt its participation in a double existence between sensuous form and the
nonsensuous universe of a qualitative-relational order whose elements are
autonomous and contribute their spontaneity to it, the semblance settles
for the redundancy of self-resemblance. Instead of living up to the power
of the false, it settles for a “ the ” truth.
Returning representation fully to the status of the semblance, freed of
its pretense to the truth, means peculiarly departing from the representa-
tion in such a way as to reimpart an impersonal force of vitality to what
otherwise, “ realistically ” speaking, would appear to be personal. Val é ry ’ s
“ someone ” is Deleuze ’ s “ fourth person singular ” (Deleuze 1990, 141). Not
some particular person but a form of life “ in person ” — directly perceptually
felt in all its abstract intensity, qualitatively-relationally more-than objec-
tively real. Not inner being: “ extra-being ” (Deleuze 1990, 7). The drawing
has yielded from sensuous form an event of extra-being. Art of this kind
is best called “ fi gural, ” to distinguish it from the representational ( “ fi gura-
tive ” ) art from which it departs (Deleuze 2004b, 10 – 13, 31 – 38; Manning
2009b, 170 – 183).
Departing from representation means returning the semblance to the
event of its native abstractness: the spontaneous, impersonal force of
thinking-feeling that comes amodally to vision through the cracks in the
artifact ’ s sensuous form. The feeling of human depth that conventionally
accompanies a rendering of a human fi gure of the kind that aspires to
representational “ exactitude ” is brushed away. The “ peculiar alteration ” of
line that returns the semblance to itself is unabashedly, wholly and only,
technically, on the surface of the paper or canvas. The semblance specula-
tively-pragmatically detaches itself from this surface, peculiarly, singularly,
directly for the abstract seeing. “ Everything now returns to the surface, ”
self-abstracting (Deleuze 1990, 7). The semblance makes no pretense of
making another world appear, or of being authorized or guaranteed by a
depth of order objectively underlying this world, or again of refl ecting a
subjective depth of personal experience. Returning to the surface, the
better to detach from it, the event of the fi gural is ambivalent toward its
134 Chapter 4
own sensuous content. It de- limits the surface, without giving it the sem-
blance of depth that would make it a virtual space for the content to be
abstractly contained in.
The alteration that returns drawing to semblance is, simply, a line
(Val é ry 2003c, 78). The peculiarity of the actually drawn sensuous line is
doubled by a perceptually felt abstract line. Their in-between is constitutive
of the semblance. Between them, they gesture to a style of being and becom-
ing, in the fourth-person singular: a dynamic form-of-life “ in person ” ;
impersonal force of vitality detaching itself from someones in particular to
affi rm its own qualitative-relational consistency; “ a ” life (Deleuze 2007,
388 – 393; Manning, forthcoming b; on style, Val é ry 2003c, 81). If the
drawing is actually of someone, if it was made from a live model, it is more
precise to say that the actual person from which the semblance has
detached belongs to the impersonal force of vitality this event brings to
surface expression, than it is to say that the semblance belongs to the actual
person as his or her true resemblance. The likeness of the actual person is
but the host of the semblance ’ s qualitative-relational event: its local sign.
Any person to which the drawing corresponds is more possessed by it than
possessing of it. Figural drawing returns a quasi-magical power of gesture
to representational art. It makes-felt personifi cation as a force of life in itself,
in excess of any given instant or instance of its actual taking sensuous
form. It makes appear what Benjamin would call the “ aura ” of a person.
Benjamin defi nes aura as “ the unique apparition of a distance, however
near it may be. ” In the vocabulary of this essay, Benjamin ’ s “ aura ” is the
singular and immediate perceptual feeling of a nonlocal linkage (Benjamin
2003, 255).
This, oddly, allies drawing to ritual. Ritual, as a technique of existence,
reaches to the sky in order to bring to cosmological expression magical
powers of gesture. Figural art as a diagrammatic technique of existence
departs from representation to bring stylistic expression to quasi-magical
powers of gesture. Rather than realistically evoking a transcendent feeling
of a certain someone ’ s depth of person, it peculiarly, stylistically invokes
the directly perceptually-felt excess of a self-detaching surface-force of
personifi cation immanent to “ someone. ” As with ritual, the creation of
this effect requires rigorous technique performed under prepared and pro-
pitious conditions. The conditions for the drawing ’ s success are also socio-
cultural: the suggestiveness of portraiture is no less an invoked relational
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, Second Movement 135
reality than the suggestion of ritual. It is not in all cultures at all times that
the relational conditions are propitious. Val é ry ’ s account of fi gural drawing,
published in the 1930s about art from the previous century, was already
retrospective. Under the combined pressures of the rise of mechanical
reproduction famously analyzed by Benjamin (2003) and abstract art ’ s
complete rupture with representation, the sociocultural conditions had
already passed beyond a threshold.
The gestural kinship between fi gural art and ritual fell into abeyance.
Which is to say: into potential. Which is to say: potentially drawn back
out, intensely, reinventively, to surface again. Antonin Artaud ’ s drawing of
magical “ spells ” in his works on paper of the late 1940s does just that,
making an effective neoarchaism of fi gural art.
To understand these drawingsas a whole
one has to1) leave the written page
to enter intothe real
but2) leave the real
to enter into the surrealthe extra-real … into which these drawings
keep on plunging
seeing as they come from hereand seeing as they are in fact …
but the figurationon paperof an élanthat took placeand producedmagnetically andmagically itseffects
and seeing as thesedrawings are not the
136 Chapter 4
Antonin Artaud, Self-Portrait, 1947, Mus é e National d ’ Art Moderne, Centre Georges
Pompidou, Bequest of Paule Th é venin, 1993
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, Second Movement 137
representationor thefiguration
of an objector a state of mind or fear,of a psychological
elementor event,
they are purelyand simply thereproduction onpaperof a magical
gesture
(Artaud 1948, 34–35)
The Unlimited Returns
Abstract art frees the line from representation, as radically as possible. In
doing so, it frees vision from the task of having to depart from realistic
content, as well as freeing it to forego personifi cation. Its lines (and con-
trasts, and color fi elds) double the sensuous surface of the canvas or paper
with a sense of movement perceptually felt in vision, but not continuing
“ behind ” anything else or “ beyond ” where it goes. Pure activity of vision,
stirring itself, but going absolutely nowhere other than with this visual
event, stalling any possibility of a pointing-toward a something or particu-
lar someone beyond its own occurrence. Vision self-detaching into its own
virtual event: semblance of seeing . Semblance of a truth of vision.
Abstract art returns vision kinesthetically to its own self-creative activ-
ity. Vision is remitted to the felt activity of its coming eventfully into itself:
a proprioception of vision. Pure visual activity, at the absolute vanishing
point where it enters a zone of indistinction with thought, from which its
action is ever renascent. Pure thinking-seeing, perceptually felt. The abstract
opening of vision onto thought is purely dynamic. It brooks no closure.
Unspatialized, eschewing content; neither containing nor contained. “ The
unlimited returns ” (Deleuze 1990, 7). 10
Any technique of existence can be de-limited (as the fi gural does for
drawing or painting), or unlimited (as abstraction does for all of the plastic
138 Chapter 4
arts), in a virtual event returning its predominant sense mode or principal
experiential factor to its own activity, at a point of indistinction with
thought. The more unlimiting this event is — the more speculative its
force — the more diffi cult it becomes to imagine an ambulatory conversion
along invented world-lines from semblance of a truth to pragmatic truth.
That translation, however, is always possible, given creative impulse of
adequately open-range and powers of the false of an intensity commensu-
rate to the purity of the virtual stirring. The more abstract and unlimited
the event, the more dynamically it will stall on its own occurrence. Active
cesura. Break. Brake. Translation awaits, in an inaugural stalling of eventful
foretracing. The visual event expresses its coming into itself, already
intensely tending, but as yet unextending toward others to come. Pure
intensive expression, without person, object, or issue. Open expression, in
just this event, and only of it. 11
Animateness
There is a move from modern dance to contemporary dance that parallels
the change from fi gural drawing to abstract art. The transition is classically
seen in the difference between Martha Graham and Merce Cunningham.
Graham ’ s modern dance made symbolic use of gesture. The movements of
the body were deployed to evoke depths of personal feeling striking a
universal chord. Dance, she wrote, “ is the evocation of man ’ s inner nature
. . . the history and psyche of race brought into focus. . . . The reality of
dance is its truth to our inner life. Therein lies its power to move and com-
municate experience. ” The role of dance is to evocatively communicate an
extra-dance truth, construed as the universal truth of “ man. ” Its “ reality
. . . can be brought into focus — that is, into the realm of human values — by
simple, direct, objective means ” (Graham 1998, 50, 53). Simple, direct,
objective means: operating metaphorically.
Cunningham disables metaphor and cuts communication. He strips
dance of “ all representative and emotional elements that might drive
movement . . . to focus on pure movement ” (Gil 2002, 121). The focus on
pure movement brings dance integrally back to the “ kinesthetic sense, ” as
taken up in vision: specifi cally at the vanishing point where proprioception
enters into a zone of indistinction with thought. Dance kinesthetically
“ appeals through the eye to the mind ” (Cunningham 1968, 90).
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, Second Movement 139
It can do this only if actions are “ broken up ” (Cunningham 1968, 91).
This means disarticulating the objective interlinkages that form between
actions following actual world-lines, binding them into recognizable path-
ways with pre-understood meaning. It also means “ emptying ” movement
of any symbolic evocations or metaphorical associations that might build
upon this pre-understanding (Gil 2002, 121 – 122). Cunningham ’ s uncom-
promising de-Grahaming of dance excludes any “ meaning ” that is not
“ betrayed immediately by the action ” (Cunningham 1968, 90). Dance thus
actively recurs to the immediate thinking-feeling of bodily gesture. With-
drawn from any in-built relation to extra-dance reality, it recurs to its own
event. To what it can do best, and better than any other technique of
existence: give immediate meaning to bodily gesture, in and of itself. But
what “ meaning ” can pure bodily movement have once it is “ broken ” and
“ emptied? Only a creative semblance of meaning — a speculative meaning
of a singularly dancerly kind.
Val é ry anticipates the Cunninghamian transition to contemporary
dance. “ Most of our voluntary movements, ” he writes, “ have as their end
an exterior action: it is a question of reaching a place or an object, or of
modifying some perception or sensation at a determinate point. . . . Once
the goal is reached, once the affair terminates, our movement, which was
in a certain way inscribed in the relation of our body to the object and our
intention, ceases. The movement ’ s determination contains its extermina-
tion; it cannot be conceived or executed without the presence and collabo-
ration of the idea of the event terminating it ” (Val é ry 2003a, 27). “ There are
other movements, ” he continues, “ whose evolution no localized object
excites or determines, can cause or conclude. No thing which, rejoined,
brings resolution to these acts. ” Movements of this kind have “ dissipation
itself for its object. ” Such movements are “ an end in themselves. ” Since this
is an “ end ” without conclusion, all of this amounts to creating a perpetually
“ nascent state ” as an end in itself (28). Lacking an immanent principle to
terminate or fi nally determine its movements, the movements “ must mul-
tiply ” until some “ ’ indifferent circumstance ” intervenes from without to
dissipate them: “ fatigue , or convention . ” Even this intervention from without
brings no conclusion. The movement returns to the end it carries in itself:
its nascent state. Paradoxically, when dance movement takes dissipation for
its only external object, it becomes self-moving, ever returning itself to a
nascent state. It becomes self-reenergizing. This “ modifi es our feeling of
140 Chapter 4
energy ” (28). What it means to feel bodily energy changes: it is now imme-
diately thought-felt, in perpetual nascency, unmediated by any predeter-
mined idea of fi nality. This change, this gestural opening to an experience
of movement unlimited, is the semblance of meaning produced by dance
as pure movement, or what Gil calls “ total movement ” (Gil 2001).
When gesture is deprived in this way of its terminus, its pragmatic truth
potential is suspended. This makes it a purely speculative activity. Any
determinate relation to an objective order or a subjective realm of personal
intention that may be habitually or conventionally “ inscribed ” in it is ex-
inscribed. The movement relates only to its own self-energizing event. The
unlimited recurring of dance to its own event is just that: an eternal recur-
rence. When gesture ’ s determination is no sooner its extermination,
making it as self-dissipating as it is self-energizing, movement enters a state
of perpetual turnover onto its own rebeginning. Gesture barely just made
folds over into gesture already in the making, in continuous variation.
Movement “ doubles back on itself ” (Gil 2002, 123). Each doubling back is
both an actual transition between actual movements and a form of transi-
tion . The form of transition belongs to no one movement. It comes between,
with its own qualitative-relational feel. It is a nonlocal linkage. Vitality
affect. The experience of the dance is of the nonlocal linkages, not the
individual movements taking separately or even in aggregate. The order of
the dance as such is the order of the nonlocal linkages ’ turning over into
each other, their relational qualities accumulating in a “ Universe of Dance ”
(Val é ry 2003a, 31) spontaneously detaching from the actual surface of the
body, doubling its actual movements. This is the universe in which bodily
vitality affects are kinesthetically thought-felt to merge and diverge, repeat
and vary, fold in and out of each other in their own manner, sui generis,
exonerated from both the objective constraints of world-line formation
and subjective pre-understandings of their human symbolic signifi cance
or metaphorical associations.
Asked to defi ne the body, William Forsythe answers: “ a body is that
which folds ” (Forsythe 2008; Manning 2009a). A body is that which
doubles back on itself in a perpetual turnover of gestures, from which a
universe of bodily forms of transition self-detach, in live performance, to
compose a sui generis order that nonsensuously “ diagrams ” the body ’ s
potential for infi nitely renewed and varied movement. Performed event of
the body ’ s vital self-abstraction.
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, Second Movement 141
Deleuze says of the diagram that it is “ not a place, but rather a ‘ non-
place ’ : a place only of changes ” (1988a, 85). The universe of dance in which
the event of the body ’ s self-abstraction nonsensuously occurs is not a
“ space. ” 12 It is a non-place, made only of forms of gestural change, bodily
forms of transition, in a state of perpetual nascency. Each actual movement
from which the dance self-detaches no sooner arises than it returns to the
continually repeated variation from which it came. Each actual move-
ment ’ s orientation is to repeated change, doubled by an accompanying
alteration in the self-detaching nonsensuous order of nonlocal linkages.
These qualitative-relational “ movements which are their own ends ” have
“ no direction in space ” (Val é ry 2003a, 28). They self-abstract from the
space of actual bodily movement. Not into another space of the body
doubling its actual world with another (as was the case with ritual dance),
but rather into “ Time ” (Val é ry 2003a, 31). The space of contemporary
dance is a temporal realm of “ acts ” (31) whose incessant dissipation and
rearising makes nonsensuously felt energetic bodily change, in a perpetu-
ally nascent state “ emptied ” of both human meaning and pragmatic poten-
tial for termination. 13 Dance makes directly perceptually-felt time of the
body expressing its potential for change.
The dance is the conversion of the body ’ s movement in space into the
Time of its alteration: its speculative translation into a universe of pure
bodily becoming. The life of the body unlimited, in a pure experience of
its becoming. Semblance of life. Embodied life: pure expression of the
body ’ s aliveness. Animateness as such.
The semblance of meaning produced by the dance is a direct, perceptu-
ally felt experience of the body ’ s power of animate becoming. To dance is
a technique of existence for performing a felt “ consciousness of life ” : a
direct “ sense of vital power ” experienced in a “ play of ‘ felt energies ’ ”
(thought-felt-movement energies) that is as “ different from any system of
physical forces ” (Langer 1953, 175) as space is from time. What is per-
formed are “ dance forces, virtual powers ” (176). “ The dancer ’ s actual ges-
tures are used to create a semblance of self-expression, and are thereby
transformed into virtual spontaneous movement, or virtual gesture ” (180).
Semblance of self-expression: pure impersonal expression of bodily power,
in nonsensuous excess over the body. “ Superabundance of power ” (Val é ry
2003c, 31). Body unlimited. Abstract energy of embodied life unrestrained
by content (Langer 1953, 174). The life amodal.
142 Chapter 4
THIRD MOVEMENT: THE PARADOX OF CONTENT
Of Force and Fusion
The technique of existence to which dance is traditionally considered most
nonsensuously similar is music. Langer roundly criticizes the notion that
dance dances music, or even rhythm (Langer 1953, 169 – 171), rather than
purely “ dancing the dance ” as Cunningham insists (Gil 2002, 125). Cun-
ningham ’ s point is that for dance to take itself to the highest power, in
order to express most purely the body ’ s animate power, it must expunge
itself of extra-dance elements (by “ breaking up ” movement). Any use that
may be made of music, language, d é cor, visuals, lighting effects, must fuse
into the dancing of the dance, taken up in it to become an element imma-
nent to it — just as touch becomes an element immanent to sight in the
everyday experience of perceptually feeling a texture through vision.
Dance, like vision, or any other technique of existence, is a relational fi eld
that is as heterogeneous in its constitution as it is all to itself in its affective
tonality and force of becoming (the powers of the false it marshals). There
is a generic feel to seeing, even though every sight is singular, just as much
as there is a generic feel to dance, even though every performance is
different. 14
Each technique of existence brings to singular-generic expression a
relational fi eld that is in principle infi nite in its diversity. A technique of
existence is defi ned less by the catalog of its elements, than by the
The dance as such is composed of nonlocal linkages: directly perceptu-
ally felt vitality affects. The danced vitality affects are singular. It is of the
nature of performance that the “felt energies” of each performance are
qualitatively different. The felt force of the performance varies night to
night. The vitality affects’ singularity, however, is enveloped in a generic
performance envelope. Danced vitality affects are singularly enveloped in
a generic affective tonality: that of dance itself as a domain of creative
activity, or technique of existence. There is a generic thinking-feeling of
dance’s emptying of bodily movement that is incomparable, for example,
to the thinking-feeling of figural drawing’s de-limitation of personality. If
there is any similarity between the two domains of activity, it is a nonsen-
suous similarity, thought-felt in the way a play of nonlocal linkages brings
differencings together across varied repetitions.
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, Third Movement 143
relational manner in which it eventfully effects a fusional mutual inclusion
of a heterogeneity of factors in a signature species of semblance. It is
defi ned by the manner of the event of lived abstraction it performs. As
suggested in chapter 2, an evaluation of a technique ’ s manner of event can
replace the notion of the “ medium. ”
The fusional practice of making extra-dance elements become imma-
nent to the dance is best seen in the work of choreographers like William
Forsythe, whose creative practice embraces a wide diversity of composi-
tional elements. Cunningham, for his part, took great pains to maintain a
radical disjunction between dance and music, insistently holding them in
a relation of “ nonrelation ” (Gil 2002, 118). Relations-of-nonrelation,
however, in no way exclude fusion. In fact, when the fusion does occur,
it can be all the more striking. The audiovisual fusion in cinema discussed
in chapter 2 in relation to the work of Michel Chion arises from a disjunc-
tion between sound and vision. To use the classic example, a cut may go
directly from a swinging arm to a reeling body, skipping over the blow.
The visuals of the blow are replaced by the sound of fi st hitting jowl. Nev-
ertheless, most spectators will report having seen the blow. The blow was
really perceptually felt in vision, in what Chion calls a “ synchretic ” fusion
of sound and sight occurring amodally across the disjunction between
visual segments, and between them and the sound track. The effect is
unitary ( a blow). But the unity of effect is entirely owing to the experiential
differential that is its compositional principle. The compositional tech-
nique employed was nondecomposably audiovisual. It occurred in the
amodal between of hearing and seeing. It could not have occurred had
sound and sight not come-together just so, in just this disjunctive way
(timing is everything; technique is everything). Still, the resulting strike-
effect is thought-felt in the affective tonality of vision (in a “ withness ” of
the eyes; Whitehead 1978, 64).
Cunningham ’ s insistence on the “ autonomy ” of the dance and the
music cannot exclude this kind of synchretic fusion, only make it rarer by
contriving it to occur only “ by chance. ” Any fusion effects occurring will
be thought-felt in the affective tonality of danced gesture, just as in the
audiovisual example the synchresis was felt in the affective tonality of
vision. The perceptual feeling of the cinematic strike is contrived in such
a way that the disjunction is not experienced as such. The experiential
differential is contrived to operate nonconsciously. The composition of the
relational fi eld of the fusion-effect ’ s emergence disappears behind the
144 Chapter 4
drama of its effect. If we apply this to Cunningham ’ s technique of holding
music and dance in extreme disjunction, it is not necessary to see it as a
refusal of dance fusion and of the making-immanent to dance of music.
Instead, it can be seen as a practice for bringing an awareness of the dis-
junctive operation of experiential fusion to the surface of dance, making
consciously felt the fact that the compositional principle of this technique
of existence, like all techniques of existence, is always differential. 15 There
is always disjunction. No technique of existence can so purify its fi eld as
to make it homogeneous: simply non-relational. All techniques of exis-
tence operate through relations-of-nonrelation. Experiential fusion-effects.
Mutual inclusion of a heterogeneity of factors becoming, singular-generi-
cally, forces of pure expression.
“ Pure ” does not mean homogeneous or simply nonrelational. “ Pure ”
means: having the compositional power to mutually include; to bring dif-
ferentials of experience together across their disjunction, to unitary expe-
riential effect; to effectively convert heterogeneous outside factors into
immanent forces of singular-generic expression.
It was the force of the blow that was audiovisually perceptually-felt in
vision, as the cinematic event. The sound occurred with synchretized cin-
ematic force. “ Pure ” dance likewise converts extra-dance factors into dance
forces . This is done in different manners by different choreographic prac-
tices, in more or less rarefi ed ways, with or without this process becoming
conscious in the usual sense (it is always thought-felt as the quality of the
dance). Extra-dance factors become-dance, as dance becomes what it does,
in a next eventful expression of how it makes itself felt for what it can do
most purely.
“ Pure ” as applied to “ expression ” means: effectively fusional. It means:
that the compositional “ extra ” of heterogeneous elements that technically
enter-in is felt unitarily in the dynamic form of an immanent force issuing
as an event, in experiential excess over both the sensuous forms involved
and their sense modalities. Pure expression points to no content other than
this event: its own event. Fusion is another word for nonlocal linkage.
Effect is another word for nonsensuous similarity. Expression is another
way of saying translation of world-lines into a changing qualitative-rela-
tional order doubling the objective order.
The observation that the necessarily differential principle of composi-
tion involved in every technique of existence — including the senses
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, Third Movement 145
themselves — can disappear in the drama of the effect produced adds an
important tool to the project of rethinking the double ordering of the
“ archive ” of experience as technique, as well as to the related project of
rethinking the “ media ” according to the manner of experiential event
catalyzed. The way in which the differentials of the fi eld of relation techni-
cally co-compose to singular-generic effect, the way in which the constitu-
ent heterogeneity of the fi eld is highlighted or erased, can be used as a
criterion of evaluation, alongside the possibility of evaluating the specula-
tive-pragmatic polarity of an expressive event.
Animateness Afl oat
Just as dance comes most intensely into its own by breaking up (breaking
open) movement to become a pure expression of bodily power, music can
break up sound, to become a pure rhythmic expression. The only way in
which music can be said to be like dance is in the sense that it can effect,
in its own relational fi eld and in its own manner, the “ same ” process of
emptying itself of symbolic meaning and metaphorical associations.
Music “ untouched by extramusical elements ” — or to be more exact, music
that fusionally mutually includes in and as its own pure event of expres-
sion all factors entering its relational fi eld, so that upon entering that fi eld
they become musical forces — is termed “ absolute music ” (Ashby 2010, 6).
Absolute music continually, varyingly, repeatingly dissipates sound and
reenergizes it into a perpetual state of nascency, as contemporary dance
does for bodily gesture. The signifi cant difference is that music does not
have to use the body as local sign. Its local signs are incorporeal : sound
waves. Pure energy forms, directly perceptually-felt as rhythm in an amodal
in-between of hearing and proprioception on a border zone with thought.
The thinking-feeling of dynamic sound-form effects an experience of
vitality affect in lift-off from the body. The kinesthetic effect seems to fl oat
in a space of tireless movement where felt-energies of nonlocal linkage fold
into and out of each other, merging and diverging in an endless play of
variation. The bodies of the musicians playing the music occupy an adja-
cent space from which this universe of music departs, in experiential offset.
Except, once again, this is not a space — all the less so for having set itself
off in this way from the local sign of the body. All the more Timely.
All the more impersonal. Not even “ someone. ” No-one time. Not a
146 Chapter 4
determinate time. Timeliness intensely alive with vitality affect. The con-
version of the space of embodied experience into an intensive time of
transformation is taken to a still higher power by music. Vitality affect
fl oats in a sonorous universe, its qualitative-relational order of nonlocal
linkage attaining unparalleled degrees of permutational freedom. Vitality
affect afl oat: animateness untethered. Semblance of pure aliveness in play.
Aliveness Engines
“ Aliveness ” : not the same as “ live. ” Aliveness is the relational quality of
life. It is a semblance: a nonsensuous similarity. Like all nonsensuous simi-
larity, it self-detaches from the objective combinations of things that go
into a live performance, doubling them with an order of lived abstraction.
A priori, there is no reason to believe that a dance or music recording de-
animates the expressive event. Since the aliveness of the performance
detaches itself from the performance even as it happens, there is no reason
it cannot survive a second remove. What is certain is that it cannot survive
a second remove — or even a repeat live performance — unchanged.
This is because the conditions of production or reproduction of an event,
in all their singularity and genericness, are just as active as “ extra ” ingredi-
ents in the expression as any other factors. Such contextual factors as the
unique acoustics, and even the mood of the listener or the collective “ feel ”
of the audience, are as fusionally ingredient to the quality of experience of
a piece of music in a given iteration as is the plucking of strings. Given the
kinesthetic-proprioceptive tenor of musical hearing, the iPod ’ s launching
of the experience of music into everyday movement can be expected to
become powerfully immanent to how the technique of existence of music
can make itself felt, and what expressively it can do. Technologies in the
narrow sense — architectural acoustics, recording, computerization, minia-
turization — do not denature techniques of existence. They propagate, dis-
seminate, and vary their events. They impel techniques of existence into
evolutions, and speciations. Understood from this angle, technologies are
“ machinic phylums ” forming “ technological lineages ” — world-lines of
technological movement (Deleuze and Guattari 1987, 404 – 415).
The formation of technological lineages is not extraneous to techniques
of existence. It does not weaken or degrade their powers of expression.
The vicissitudes of technology are immanent to the continuing self-
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, Third Movement 147
constitution of techniques of existence. Technological lineages distribute
in chronological time and extensive space the natural movement of tech-
niques of existence: expressive events ’ abstract intensity, coming to vary.
Self-differing, as they always do, in any event. Technologies boost the
natural dynamic of self-differing inherent to experiential dynamics. They
prolong the spontaneous power incumbent in experiential events of self-
detachment, toward continuing variation.
It is a commonplace of media theory to say that technologies prolong
the senses. This is the least of it. The senses are in any event self-prolong-
ing. They only ever work to detach from their objective (organic) function-
ing events of lived abstraction that take them places they cannot go (in
thought, in language). The senses themselves are technologies of lived
abstraction, doing hard fusional labor every microsecond of every day,
between every living breath. Technologies are not “ prostheses of the body. ”
The senses are already that. Technologies are abstract-event multipliers and
disseminators. They are prostheses of the life of abstraction. Aliveness
engines.
The question then is not whether recorded music is better or worse in
lived quality than live music, or whether a dance on video is no dance at
all. Live music and recorded music are equally performative, if differently
alive. The question is how they differ, according to the vital circumstances.
How integrally are the contextual conditions fusionally enveloped in the
event? To how unitary an effect? Synchreting from what generative dif-
ferentials? With what variation of relational quality? How disjunctively?
How “ purely ” (to what degree of effective abstraction)? With what regard
to content? Arved Ashby (2010) is right to insist that “ absolute music ”
and “ mechanical reproduction ” are not opponent concepts but must be
commaed together: Absolute Music, Mechanical Reproduction . The same must
be said for every technique of existence with respect to the expressive
purity or “ absoluteness ” of its event and that event ’ s evolutionary variation
along the world-lines of technology.
Conditions
Synchresis is one word for the spontaneous detachment of a fusion-effect
from the differential coming-together of a heterogeneity of creative factors
issuing into the occurrence of an expressive event. The fusion-effect is a
148 Chapter 4
nonlocal linkage. A lived abstraction: an occurrent self-abstraction from
the combination of objective ingredients from which it lifts off (the event ’ s
local signs). What the lived abstraction expresses is the event of its own
appearance. It is one with its own abstractive manner of appearing. It is
the abstraction of its appearance: a being of abstraction, in a becoming of
the world.
But what of the bringing-into-combination of the diversity of creative
factors considered in its own right? The elements have to come together
just so, in just this disjunctive way, for the effect to lift off. The timing has
to be right. The elements have to be brought into just the right proximity,
in just the right way so that they detonate into a self-detaching experiential
event. Technique is everything. In fact, the technicity of a technique of
existence resides in how this is done: how the conditions for the event come
together. The appearance of the effect is a spontaneous experiential com-
bustion event. But the setting-in of the conditions is prepared . Meticulously
prepared.
The preparation may be classifi able as “ naturally ” occurring (on physi-
cal, chemical, biological, geological, and meteorological strata, to name a
few). But when they are “ human ” or “ cultural ” they are always also natural.
There is no event of human experience without a body with senses to
amodally combine. There are no bodily senses in fl ights of dynamic inter-
play without a ground to stand on. There are no technological extensions
of the body ’ s life of abstraction in the absence of creative differentials of
the electromagnetic and metallurgical kind, among themselves and
between their respective strata and others. The conditions for events of
expression presuppose a nature-culture continuum from which the dif-
ferential elements brought disjunctively into play are selectively drawn, to
just this effect for each event.
If the lift-off of the experiential effect is a synchresis, the coming-into
proximity in the manner propitious for this event is a concrescence (White-
head 1978, 21, 22 and passim). 16 Synchresis and concrescence are not in
opposition or contradiction. They are coincident aspects of the same
dynamic: two poles of the process of experience, inseparably in each other ’ s
embrace. The sensuous and the nonsensuous, the abstract and the con-
crete, the objective world and the qualitative-relational universe, are
two sides of the same event. The self-abstraction of an experience is
co-occurrent with the concrescence of its ingredient elements. The
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, Third Movement 149
self-abstraction of experience is the speculative side, the concrescence the
pragmatic side. A technique of existence attends meticulously to the
second, in the fl ighty interests of the fi rst ’ s foretracing.
The concept of causality as it is usually employed is insuffi cient to
account for the creative activity of techniques of existence. Causes are
typically conceived to act locally, in part-to-part interaction. The specula-
tive-pragmatic production of an experiential effect occurs through nonlo-
cal linkage in the relational in-between of the parts involved. The effect is
holistic. Not in the sense that it is a whole composed of its objective parts.
A whole composed of parts is but a bigger part of a larger objective whole.
An experiential effect is a whole apart: a self-detaching event having
wholly and only its own dynamic unity. The event precisely expresses the
coming-together of the parts, not the parts themselves or their structure.
An event of lived abstraction is strictly speaking uncaused . Its taking-
effect is spontaneous: experiential self-combustion. It is uncaused, but
highly conditioned: wholly dependent on the coming-together of its ingre-
dient factors, just so. The conditioning always includes a pragmatics of
chance. There is always the odd detail that might unexpectedly assert itself
and destroy the effect. Or positively infl ect it. A technique of existence
must either embrace chance, converting the self-assertion of the odd detail
into a positive factor in its taking-effect. Or it must steel itself against
intrusions of chance. A technique of existence is always actively condition-
ing of its events. The conditioning crucially involves the setting into place
of enabling constraints to fi lter and infl ect chance contributions (Manning
and Massumi, forthcoming b). The pragmatic side of the speculative-
pragmatic process consists more in selecting for chance infl ections than
causing in the usual sense. Selecting chance infl ections effects a modulation,
rather than implementing a causation. The senses are the in-born modula-
tory technologies of the animal body. They do not refl ect what is outside
the organism. They infl ect what takes off from it, carrying its animate life
into the anorganic realm of lived abstraction, where all linkage is nonlocal
and activity is in effect foretraced (on anorganic life, Deleuze and Guattari
1987, 499; Deleuze 2004b, 45 – 47).
Filter as a technique of existence may, chance always enters in, to one
degree or another. There is always infl ection. Modulation is the rule. The
necessary incoming of chance toward the outcome of the experiential
event gives newness to every event. It makes every occurrence the
150 Chapter 4
appearance of a novelty. Every event a creative event. This is speculative-
pragmatic fact , ever redefi ning itself, in process. Fact is defi niteness. Novelty
is inexplicable in terms of already-defi ned, objective or sensuous, forms.
The defi niteness of fact is due to a creative movement continuing behind,
across, and through objective encounters.
The defi niteness of fact is due to its forms; but the individual fact is a creature, and
creativity is the ultimate behind all forms, inexplicable by forms. . . . The novel
entity is at once the togetherness of the “ many ” which it fi nds, and also it is one
among the disjunctive “ many ” which it leaves; it is a novel entity, disjunctively
among the many entities which it synthesizes. . . . Thus the “ production of novel
togetherness ” is the ultimate notion embodied in the term “ concrescence. ” . . .
“ Creativity ” is the universal of universals. . . . The “ creative advance ” is the applica-
tion of this ultimate principle to each novel situation it originates. (Whitehead 1978,
20 – 21)
The term concrescence, however, falls short. Of itself, it “ fails to suggest
the creative novelty involved ” in the world ’ s movements (Whitehead
1967a, 236). It is for this reason that it is useful to have another word,
such as synchresis, at the ready to specifi cally capture the aspect of the
oneness of the togetherness creatively leaving the many: the synthetic, or
fusional, pulse of process ’ s bipolar coincidence with itself. Remembering
that the “ term ‘ one ’ does not stand for ‘ the integral number one ’ ” but for
the thinking-feeling “ singularity ” of an occasion occurring to itself (White-
head 1978, 21; on fusion, Whitehead 1978, 233; 1967a, 211 – 214).
The Eternal Return of Content
Jos é Gil speaks of a “ paradox ” of the dancing body (Gil 2006). Quite simply,
it is that dance has to continually return to the body in order to newly
depart from it, to creative effect. Similarly, a universe of music only comes
in offset from performing bodies. A nonsensuous linkage of any kind is a
lived abstraction from a combination of sensuous forms. The objective
order of actuality and the qualitative-relational universe of the virtual
shadow each other at every step. They are fraternal twins, separatively
connected at birth by the umbilicus of creative advance. Dimensions of
each other. Pulses of the same movements. Poles of the one process of the
many comings-together to singular effect. Double ordering never ends.
Double existence, always, in all ways.
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, Third Movement 151
The consequence of this is that the “ purity ” of a technique of existence ’ s
expression is a fragile achievement. In fact, the emptying of the event of
expression of all content other than its own occurrence is a limit of process
toward which the world ’ s creative advance ever tends, never reaching. The
doubling of every lived abstraction by a sensuous encounter means that
there are always remainders of embodied animateness and objective order
that are nonsensuously doubled — but not erased. Emptying is not erasing.
It is taking-off-from. Breaking up is not sweeping away. It is breaking-away-
from. The sensuous remainders are buds of content ’ s regrowth: hints of
symbolic meaning; provocations for metaphorical association. It is a very
good thing they are there, for they are also local signposts for a reuptake
of the event in pragmatic ambulation: buds also for an advancement of
the objective order. Without the dogging of lived abstraction by sensuous
remainder, the world would be lost in its own speculation. The perpetual
nascency to which pure expression returns the event would fall on fallow
time. It would churn infertile. It is the sensuous remainder of the event of
expression that calls the self-detaching universe of lived abstraction back
to the walkways of the world.
The buds of content are no less incessantly necessary than they are a
constant challenge to any practice aspiring to take a technique of existence
to the expressive limit of what it can do. They are constraints enabling of
what a practice effectively does, approaching the limit of its expression.
And approaching the expressive limit is what process never ceases to do.
The limit of lived abstraction is the universal attractor of experience. It is
no less than the ever-renascent terminus of the world : the perpetual point
of departure for its renewal. Every technique of existence has an expressive
appetite for pushing nonsensuous similarity as far as it can go, carrying it
to its highest degree of abstractive intensity, making it as absolutely felt as
it can experienceably be. Pushing the limit of lived abstraction is the uni-
versal “ lure for feeling ” : appetition (Whitehead 1978, 184 – 185). Lure of
extra-being. Lure for becoming. 17
That is the necessity (of novelty). To understand the challenge, think
of contemporary dance again. To dance the dance is to extract animate-
ness — pure-movement qualities — from the actual movements of the body.
But the body remains, shadowing the nonsensuous dance-form, in heavy
contrast to its tendency to lift-off. One of the shadows the body casts is
its physical frailty: its inevitable pull to the ground, counter to the push
152 Chapter 4
to the limit. At the counter-limit : mortality. Any intense experience of the
animateness of the body contains this contrasting pull in suggestive poten-
tial. Appetitive lift to abstraction / gravitational fall-back. It takes very little
for the fall-back position to regain ground. Conventional language, with
its stockpile of at-the-ready symbolic and metaphorical associations, easily
provides the ballast. Content redux. How many reviews of contemporary
dance have been written that ponderously a reveal a “ theme ” of death? Or
sex and love, romantic ecstasy, and the wrench of jealousy? For the human
body is as sexed as it is mortal.
Absolute music, for its part, courts the return of content by virtue of its
very abstractive success. Its expressive detachment of animateness from
the local sign of the sexed-mortal body yields what conventionally (ste-
reotypically) speaking is avidly construed as soulfulness. How many music
commentaries extol the grandioseness of its “ spiritual ” meaning? Wax
lyrical on its revelation of human depth of soul? Pin its animateness-afl oat
for an evocation of the incorporeal life everlasting? Eagerly take its pure
time of alteration for a glimpse of unchanging eternity?
For fi gural art, it is the narrative powers of language that lie in wait,
content-ready. Imagine a story that the likeness seems to suggest — and the
semblance recontains itself. Where once it struck impersonally as a force
of personifi cation, it now evokes a striking force of personality, its de-
limitation undone.
The turnoff onto the associative detours of conventionalized discourse
through which content tends to return is already in bud in the direct
experience of the expressive event. Crucially, there are already beginnings
of a translation of the affective dimension of the event, as it happens, into
emotion. As was discussed earlier, a multiplicity of singular vitality affects
are enveloped in the affective tonality of the event. The affective tonality
is the performance envelope of the event. It falls into a certain generic
region of expression, depending on the technique of existence. The singu-
larity of the vitality affects modulate the generic tonality of each event,
giving it a singular-generic feel, but the modulation is contrived to stay
within the parameters of the event-envelope. Positively, this means that
the vitality affects resonate in the event, ensuring a certain intensity. At
the same time, it prepares the way for their conversion of vitality affects
into “ categorical affects ” : identifi able, generally recognizable, narratively
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, Third Movement 153
(or otherwise) codable, symbolically evocative, metaphorically redolent
human emotions.
Human emotion is the royal road to the recontainment of lived abstrac-
tion. It consists in the translation of the intensity of vitality affects ’ coming
singularly together in the same event into recountable, codable, or formal-
izable content. It is precisely the overabundance of the vitality affects that
opens the way for this. Their multiplicity is mutually included in an overall
feel. Their singularities merge into a generic thinking-feeling of the event.
At that level, their variety is only vaguely sensed. It is this indistinct per-
ceptual feeling of a superabundance of lived intensity that is translated
into emotion. From the angle of an overcoding or formalizing technique
of existence conveyed by conventional language use, the resonance of the
enveloped vitality affects comes across as an ambiguity of reference or
meaning. The ambiguity then has to be processed. It can be reduced by
interpretation to one “ true ” meaning. Or it can be relayed into concentric
circles of symbolic or metaphorical plurivocity. From there it can spiral,
centripetally into a dramatic center of signifi ance, or centrifugally out of
orbit into fl ights of more and more evocative fancy. Any of these proce-
dures can be narrativized in one way or another, structurally coded accord-
ing to one version or another of what constitutes a structure, or procedurally
formalized to one degree or another.
Whichever path is taken, the point of conversion is the transformation
of vitality affect into emotion. The conversion into emotion may be explic-
itly noted, thereby becoming the content itself. Or it may be transitioned-
through on the road to content otherwise construed. The resonant tenor
of the expressive event is doubled by what Barthes called a “ supplementary
message ” to its sheer occurrence. The event passes from pure “ uncoded ”
liveness (mechanically reproduced or not) to coded “ message ” (Barthes
1977, 19, cited in Ashby 2010, 234). It becomes communicable. The event
ceases to be expressive on its own singular-generic account, to enter the
general category of “ communication ” — a super-genre as envelopingly
vague and indistinct as it is wont to take life ’ s intensities to be. No general
category understands the fi rst thing about affect. They are always by nature
emotion-ready, because they are always ready-made for content. They have
an in-bred appetite for content. They maw for it. That ’ s what they do.
They are voracious techniques of containment. “ Common sense ” is
154 Chapter 4
FOURTH MOVEMENT: COMPOSING THE POLITICAL
Aesthetico/Political
“ And the art is not the better or the worse. ” The conventional “ language ”
of dance, for Cunningham, has nothing to do with it as art . The aesthetic
force of its event is elsewhere. But given the insistence of content to return,
and its budding already on the level of the local signs from which the
dance-as-dance lifts off, how can the “ art ” be effectively segregated from
its conventional language? Does not the aesthetic question reside precisely
in the tension between them?
The aesthetic force of an expressive event is its charge of lived abstrac-
tion: the manner of semblance it produces, and the intensities of
promiscuously dedicated to general categories. As is “good sense,” in a
more selective and disciplined way. “Opinion” invests general categories
with a personalized emotional force of their own. Weapons of mass con-
tainment, all.
Cunningham describes, in the case of dance, the effects of the contain-
ment in emotion brought to the expressive event by coding in language,
and (which amounts to much the same thing) overcoding on the model
of language, of elements that would otherwise have the immediacy of
forces constitutively immanent to the dance. The effect is deintensifying
and indifferencing:
the sense of human emotions that a dance can give is governed by fam-iliarity with the language, and the elements that act with the language;here those would be music, costume,together with the space in which the dance happens.
joy, love, fear, anger, humor, all can be “made clear” by images familiar to the eyes. and all are grand or meager depending on the eye of the beholder.
what to some is splendid entertainment, to others merely tedium and fidgets; what to some seems barren, to others is the very essence of the heroic.
and the art is not the better or the worse.
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, Fourth Movement 155
experience coming-together toward an issue in that semblance and playing
renascently through it. The detachment of the semblance occurs in a rela-
tional fi eld already overpopulated with techniques content-ready for its
recontainment. Their inhabitation of the relational fi eld within which an
art is practiced makes that fi eld a doubly problematic fi eld . The aesthetic
problem is always on the one hand compositional : how are the ingredient
elements brought together in such a way as to become-immanent to the
coming event as constitutive forces of its push toward pure expression?
The compositional problem cannot be addressed without at the same time
addressing the problem of relational co-habitation, which is ecological :
which extra-elements will be admitted into the symbiosis of compositional
co-immanence? Which will be treated as predators or competitors and be
held at bay? How, and at what proximity or distance, to what follow-on
effect? Will a degree of containment be accepted, or even encouraged with
a view to managing it or channeling it? What will the posture be toward
common sense? Good sense? Public opinion? Will gestures be made to
certain codings or symbolic or metaphorical connections? If the latter, will
they spiral in to a center of meaning or swing centrifugally out in associa-
tive abandon? If the former, of what kind? Narrativizing? Structurizing?
Formalizing?
What brings these two sets of questions together as two sides of one
complex aesthetic problem is that they both pivot on the question of imma-
nence. What elements become immanent forces contributing to the event ’ s
appetite for pure expression, and how? What elements don ’ t, and how
again? It ’ s the same how. It ’ s the same question, seen from two sides. Any
becoming-immanent to an event is toward the self-detaching of its sem-
blance. Which leaves that which is detached-from out. This is a peculiarly
altered “ out. ” The elements that will be remaindered as extra must be outed-
in — otherwise their buds of content will invade like weeds through cracks
in the surface of the event. They must be actively ex-included. Whitehead
calls this “ negative prehension. ” A negative prehension is an exclusive treat-
ment paradoxically “ expressing a bond ” (Whitehead 1978, 41).
One last “ how ” : How can it not be obvious that the two sides of the
problem, the taking-in and the out-treatment, taken integrally together,
are political? Integrally, the doubly problematic fi eld of art is aesthetico-
political . And what event-expressive technique of existence, regardless of
its avowed genre, is not an “ art ” ?
156 Chapter 4
Composing Away
There are different strategies for dealing with the duplicity of the problem-
atic fi eld. Arved Ashby (2010) charts in detail how Gustav Mahler followed
his tendency to “ become a musical absolutist ” (224) by out-treating the
“ quasi-linguistic meanings that arise from orderings of functional units ”
of musical composition (226). He worked concertedly “ against the incur-
sion of discourse, against words and obligatory meaning, ” against any
“ supplementary message ” spinning off adventitiously from the music or
grafting itself on it parasitically (234, 237). His project was to express as
purely as possible a musical force of composition per se. His particular
strategy was to out-treat extra-elements of the language species by embrac-
ing a different species of content-budding, this one inherent to the direct
perception of music by virtue of the local signs it necessarily employs.
Heard rhythm has a spontaneous tendency to transit amodally into virtual
visual motion, thought-felt in nonsensuous similarity to it. There is a pos-
sibly innate amodal attunement between heard rhythm, visual rhythm,
and kinesthesia-proprioception that makes it diffi cult not to see a rhythm
perceptually felt in one of these modalities automatically in another. Few
are those who can hear music without the virtual visual accompaniment
of thought-felt movement patterns of color and light. Few are those who
are not moved to reenact the hearing as it happens with virtual gestures.
These nonsensuous similarities are just asking for translation into content,
for example through conventional associations embedded in language
(such as the association between a high tone and a rising gesture or visual
movement, connoting hope, for example).
Mahler embraced the budding of visual thinking-feeling in music, while
suppressing the “ Romantic ideas of extramusical illustration ” (234). His
music would be intensely imagistic, but he would make it an “ imagery
without reference ” (237). The technique he employed was to make the
composition “ so vivid and alive ” that what it made felt would be “ dramatic
instantaneities ” that would be “ like ” (a semblance of) the “ performance of
a real event ” (224, 226). To manage content-formation, the semblance of
event would have to be taken to the extreme. It would have to be over-
charged, carrying an excess of dramatically instantaneous musical force.
This was accomplished by de-limiting the imagistic element: ensuring that
the music would be so vivid and alive that it would simultaneously carry
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, Fourth Movement 157
a number of image suggestions in its dynamic unfolding. This made the
embrace of imagery “ non-specifi c, ” and as a result of that “ as stymieing as
it is evocative ” (232). The composition retains its properly musical force
of expression, so powerfully enveloping the imagistic elements that the
virtual visualization is converted into an immanent music-force without
remainder. This becoming-immanent to the music of the imagery, accord-
ing to Mahler, was so complete that it could take the place of actual vision.
On a walk in the mountains, Mahler tells his companion: “ ‘ No need to
look — I have already composed all of that away ’ ” (222). What looking can
do is now best heard in the music. Sightseeing dismissed with a blink of
the ears. Mountains and mountains of sound.
This is an example of a compositional technique for out-treating sources
for the adventitious or parasitic growth of content affecting music by
taking in a bud of content of a favored kind. The selected bud is so tightly
embraced, so excessively included, that it comes vividly alive for the tech-
nique of existence adopting it. It becomes-immanent to the expressive
force of the event. The intensity of that inclusion edges out all rival con-
tent-readiness. This strategy is that of composing-away . Mahler invented a
creative strategy for composing-away, and lived it out in an exclusive dedi-
cation to the potential intensities of one genre of expressive technique of
existence, that of the symphonic music of his time.
In general, composing-away involves taking a particular technique of
existence to its highest degree of abstractive intensity, making it as abso-
lutely felt as it can experienceably be, given the conditions (individual,
social, culture, economic, technological). There are always buds of content
that sprout from within. Techniques for composing-away must negotiate
these shoots in one manner or another. Mahler ’ s technique of encouraging
a certain modality of content growth, while simultaneously stymieing it
by rendering it excessively non-specifi c, is a way of negotiating the problem
of the eternal return of content by selectively embracing a certain order of
content-readiness from the start, and then ensuring that it is not an extra-
element but rather an element of an excess of immanence. When attempts
are made to compose-away all trace of content-readiness from the get go,
the growth returns at some point later in the process, often with a ven-
geance. The return may well take the form of an insurgency of another
modality of experience bursting forth from within at the very moment the
process of expression reaches its highest intensity and achieves the purest
158 Chapter 4
appearance of nonsensuous similarity. Lived abstraction is always ontoge-
netically multiple — as a function of its purity, if not countercurrent to it. 18
Composing With
There are complementary approaches to composing away that set out to
compose with. Composing-with, as the name implies, involves combining
techniques of existence and their respective content-readinesses. The com-
bined techniques may or may not belong to a conventional “ art ” genre,
and the same goes for the outcome. Composing-with works across modali-
ties of experience, affi rming their diversity as much in the process of
composition as in its issue. Techniques for composing-with — techniques
of existence for combining techniques of existence — are traditionally
referred to by such terms as mixed-media, multimedia, cross-platform,
interdisciplinary, and transdisciplinary, depending on the period, context,
and accent. The installation work of Robert Irwin is an especially instruc-
tive example because it comes to composing-with as an outgrowth of
an other-sense insurgency marking the success of a radical project of
composing-away.
The Art of Nonobjecthood
Irwin recounts that his early artistic activity in the 1940s and 1950s in
representational portrait drawing left him unsatisfi ed, even though it won
him accolades and awards (Weschler 1982, 29 – 38). He felt as though he
were going through the motions. It lacked intensity. He felt the need to
purify his art of the “ taken-for-granted ” : “ pictorial or articulate reading of
images on any principled grounds (81). ” He would “ suspend such conven-
tions as much as possible ” (81), purifying the work of “ representation ” and
“ imagist associations ” (61). The artwork “ wouldn ’ t be ‘ about ’ anything ”
(65). It would have no content, it would be pared down to its own “ act ”
(81). “ Everything that didn ’ t ” actively “ contribute ” would be “ fi ltered out ”
(63). Nothing would be left that did not become to a contributory force
immanent to the effecting of the act. The artwork would be full of “ move-
ment, ” but it would no longer be “ extensive ” (69). Intensity would be
restored to the work when it made the motions — when it was composed
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, Fourth Movement 159
in such a way that it immanently energized its own act. It would then be
a “ nonobject ” (81): purely its own self-occurring event.
Suspending conventions, fi ltering out articulate readings, discovering
what actively contributes to the self-occurring of an event of experiential
intensity, this is nothing if not painstaking. The artist ’ s spontaneity is in
not enough (hence Irwin ’ s irritation with abstract expressionism, 41 – 51).
It ’ s all about technique. To make a pure act of art, it is necessary to “ control
every physical aspect of the work ’ s circumstances ” (77). This is because the
spontaneity must be transferred to the artwork . Complete control of the objec-
tive conditions is necessary so that the artwork becomes the subject of its
own pure act . This accords with Whitehead ’ s vocabulary, in which the
dynamic form of an event is called its “ subjective form. ” Whitehead speaks
of an occasion ’ s subjective form as the “ how ” of feeling, its “ quality of
feeling ” : the way in which the event absolutely requires that its objective
conditions be just so — but refuses to be limited to them or reduced to them.
The feeling-quality is “ how ” the event “ clothes itself in its self-defi nition, ”
over and above its objective conditions (Whitehead 1978, 85 – 86). How it
wraps itself in its own experiential quality, to take fl ight from its objective
conditions. The event ’ s act of self-occurring defi nition is as much a product
of its appetitive “ aim at further integration ” (fusion) in a nonsensuous
intensity of effect (culminating attainment of nonobjecthood) as it is about
technique (19). 19
Irwin set about the task of getting the conditions just right for his work
to take fl ight in its own purely occurrent subjective form. Twenty years of
“ investigations ” followed, during which time “ the outside world progres-
sively receded ” (70). Composing-away. Irwin carried his work through a
“ succession of reductions ” leading “ all the way to a ground zero ” (81).
Ground zero was a detonation site. Or more precisely, the supplanting of
the visual space of the painting with a self-combusting visual energy that
bursts from the frame. “ A good painting has a gathering, an interactive
build-up in it ” so that the effect just “ jumps off the goddam wall at
you. They just, bam! ” (60). A “ pure energy ” is released through vision by
the way in which the few remaining included elements reciprocally
“ act on each other ” so as to exponentially “ multiply ” their individual
abilities to the explosive point that they self-release into a single, dynamic,
fusion-effect.
160 Chapter 4
The fusion-effect detonates across a distance . It occurs to the differential
between the sensuous and objective elements. It is the effective issue of a
“ real tension ” (60). For example, Irwin fi rst experimented with the reduc-
tion of the fi guration to its most basic element: one or two lines against a
colored background. He noticed by trial and error that an imperceptible
change in the position of the line “ changed the entire fi eld ” (71), as did
any slightest change in color tone. This is because whenever a line is
present, it activates a tendency in vision. Of its own accord, the line starts
to detach from the background, in search of a fi gure to become. If the line
is placed just so, it activates the fi gurative appetite of vision. It has already
become more than a line, but is not yet a fi gure. If care is taken that no
fi gure is evoked or in any way suggested by this minimal composition,
vision is caught in a state of nascency of its tendency to fi guration. It has
been brought into a movement, but is pointing toward nothing outside
itself. One of its capacities has been activated, but it has nowhere other
than this capacitating event. It vibrates in its own capacity, shivering with
an energy that has no object — an abstract energy. The disjunction between
ground and fi gure is not fi lled with an energy of vision offering nothing
to see. A perceptually felt movement occurring through an activation of
vision, corresponding to no particular object of sight. A thought-felt kin-
esthetic-proprioceptive vision-effect. The horizontality of the line also acti-
vates a movement tendency of the colored background. A tension appears
in the colored background, due to the tendency for vision to experience a
horizontal line as a horizon line in a way that gives differential weight to
the color below and above. The space below exerts a gravitational pull on
vision that is perceptually felt as an inertia. Even the slightest suggestion
of a lightness of color tone above will attract vision upward, accompanied
by a sense that vision itself has been freed of a weight and has the light-
ness to rise. The overall effect produced by the painting is the encompass-
ing fusion-effect of these two differential tensions.
Each tension is a vitality affect of vision. Their mutual envelopment in
an overall unity of effect yields an affective tonality of vision — its singular-
generic feel, in this event. “ Of vision ” means: immanent to it; coming
directly with its activation, in the immediacy of its arising. Any change in
the position of the line will toggle the tension between visual tensions,
modulating the overall effect. The artwork has become a veritable machine
of vision: a technique of existence for its production and permutation.
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, Fourth Movement 161
After enough line paintings were experimentally produced to give an intui-
tive sense of the range of permutation enabled by this particular technique,
it was time to move on. Paintings composed of an even more minimal
visual element took their place: after the line, the point. The dot paintings
experimented with the differential tensions between the center and the
periphery, and between two hues (green and red; 88 – 89).
Perception of Perception
The produced effect is a “ fl oating feeling ” (81). Your eye “ ends up sus-
pended in midair, midspace, or midstride ” (76). This abstraction-effect is
“ not abstractable ” itself (76). It resides in its own occurrence. It cannot be
applied to something else, or taken elsewhere. It is right where it is, “ mid ” -
life. It is its own “ unmediated presence ” (87). Nothing more — or less — than
a peculiar manner of vision suspended intensely in its own activity. Vision ’ s
“ self-possession divulging itself ” (104) in a playing-out of a tension between
its genetic elements. Divulging itself as “ a quality, an energy ” perceptually
felt to self-move, “ emerging ” from the surface of the painting only to “ dis-
solve itself . . . in a kind of entropic dissipation ” (91) The rise and fall of
quivering vision caught in a state of self-agitating nascency.
“ Some time will pass ” (91). It takes time for the effect to build up and
self-combust. The fusion-effect detaches from the surface of the canvas into
a no place of the fl oating in-between. The effect is nonlocal. It is nowhere
in particular. It is a whole-fi eld effect. Where it effectively comes from is
not strictly speaking a space either, but an elemental relational fi eld. The
objective space of seeing has been self-possessed by vision, and in the
process converted into an abstract time of the thinking-feeling of vision.
Semblance of sight.
The thinking-feeling of vision ’ s self-possession is on one level a playing
out of a differential relation (of nonrelation) between ingredient elements
becoming immanent to its event. Simultaneously, on another level, it is a
way of vision relating to its own occurrence: a self-relating of vision. This
is a duplex event. A double experience. Experience of a double ordering.
The sensuous order of local signs is seen to cede to a thinking-feeling of
nonsensuous linkage in an overall fusion-effect. Vitality affects of vision
are seen to emerge-together away from their surface, and dissolve into each
other. The affective tonality in which they are enveloped, and in which
162 Chapter 4
the singular quality of the event consists, concerns only this abstract move-
ment — which is the very movement of abstraction. The perception is not
of something in particular. It is a perception of perception (92). It is a
thinking-feeling of what experientially it means to perceive. A direct,
immediate consciousness of the world ’ s ever-ongoing self-abstraction,
intensely exemplifi ed. A kinesthetic-proprioceptive glimpse of the qualita-
tive-relational universe of its experiential becoming.
This self-relating of vision is self-referential, even refl ective, in a special
sense. It is not a refl ection in vision, of the world. Nor a refl ection on
vision, in consciousness. Rather, it is a conscious refl ection, in the event
of vision, of the pure act by which it always amodally departs from itself,
in a reaching-toward the point of its feeling-quality ’ s relational indistinc-
tion with thought. All in the “ fourth-person ” singular. Of an event under-
stood as a pure elemental act we say, “ it. ” It happens. It rains. It snows.
. . . It thinking-feels.
It is only at this culminating point where vision self-references its event
in a pure act of its own thinking-feeling, that the segue can occur from
this adventure in composing-away to composings-with venturing further
afi eld. Irwin ’ s composing-away of extra-elements suspended seeing in
incipient fi gure-ground effect, incipient horizon effect, incipient vertical
gravitational effect. Buds of space. The pure energy released from the
visual surface could not be otherwise than kinesthetic-proprioceptive.
Quivering vision is not far, amodally-nonlocally speaking, from itchy feet.
Buds of ambulation. Irwin ’ s painstaking investigations succeeded in
making immanent to vision a nascency of space and the extensive move-
ments that had been among the prime targets of its project of purifi cation.
Inadvertent and unavoidable inclusions were caught in the pure act, in
the way prehistoric bugs are found as inclusions in amber. Things that
have been purifi ed out of the world and suspended in time uncannily
returning.
Reinvolvement
Irwin realized that as a result of his “ reduction ” of vision to its relational
fi eld of immanence, the work had paradoxically started to “ take in ” space
and extensive movement, but only just, as a function of its being just
minimally so. He further realized that this “ taking in ” was but a bug ’ s
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, Fourth Movement 163
Robert Irwin, Disc , 1968 – 1969, Hirshhorn Museum
breath away from a “ becoming involved ” again with the actual space of
the environment around the painting (99). His nonobject art was now
ready to move out. It had enfolded into its own event, and now it was
ready for its event to unfold and go walkabout. This is not as diffi cult in
principle as it might seem. After all, the effect that detonates when the
differentials of the elemental relational fi eld fusionally “ take ” is nonlocal.
It shouldn ’ t be such a stretch to spread its nonlocality, so that its “ taking ”
takes-in further differentials.
So Irwin now started adding. More elements, for an expanding rela-
tional fi eld. He got rid of the canvas and frame, and attached discs directly
to the wall. Objectness was back. Even the line became materialized in
some disc experiments as an actual material band across the disc. He also
added lighting: angles of illumination intersecting across the disc just so.
The effect was the same energizing of vision as before. But now the art
nonobject was perceptually felt to be detaching itself from the wall into
the surrounding space. You couldn ’ t tell if the disc was “ real ” or a sem-
blance of an object. It didn ’ t occupy a specifi c space, but still came across
164 Chapter 4
as space-fi lling in some uncanny way. This resulted from a tension between
tensions. The tension between intersecting degrees of illumination (light
and shadow), and the tension between the actual relief of a 3D object and
the fl at background surface of the wall it stood out from, became enveloped
in an overall tension. The tension between tensions had the effect of rein-
volving vision ’ s self-possession in a semblance of space. The net effect was
a semblance of space wrapped into a semblance of seeing, in perceptual-
eventful mutual inclusion. Semblance of seeing making room in itself, for
buds of space to make their growth perceptually-felt. All of this was
achieved through a composing-with: a compositional technique operating
avowedly between elements belonging to different “ media, ” and even
reinviting 3D objects back into the fold.
Ecological Immediation
From there, Irwin decided to take the work off the wall and move it into
the room. He started doing environmental designs that created perceptu-
ally-felt fusion-effects compositionally taking-in the entire room. One
example will suffi ce to show how this leads back to an ambulatory rein-
volvement of artworking in the world.
A nearly transparent white scrim that goes all the way from fl oor to
ceiling is offset from one of the walls of the room. The lighting is such
that when you fi rst enter the room, you don ’ t notice anything at all. You
think you see an empty room. But what you begin to perceptually feel
through your vision as you walk around the room is a visceral sensation
that something is amiss. The effect takes some time to set in. It nags at
you. You think you feel a little disoriented, a tad dizzy perhaps. You feel
something niggling, like a stirring on the periphery of vision itching for
you to turn your attention to it. But attend as you might, you fi nd nothing
to look at. Then it happens. Bam! The scrim suddenly jumps into sight.
It ’ s less that you looked at it, than it jumped out at you. It suddenly
appeared out of nowhere: out of the self-activity of vision.
Vision had been quivering at its own limit, under conditions it had
diffi culty taking-in. Walking around the room enabled it to come out into
itself. That happened because the scrim ’ s offset from the wall behind it was
just on the threshold of perception. It was not distinct enough to see, but
not so wholly imperceptible that it had no effect. This produced a niggling
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, Fourth Movement 165
depth-effect that was not consciously seen at fi rst, but was already non-
consciously activated. All it needed to come into effect was the actual
kinesthetic-proprioceptive experience of walking around the room. The
fusion-effect of the artwork resulted from a nonconscious collaboration
between vision and the sense of movement. Your walking around the room
was not just an incidental. It had been pre-composed into the coming
event as an active force for its taking-effect. The viewer ’ s walking around
the gallery was included in the work as a constitutive element of it. It was
made to become immanent to the work, as a contributor to the relational
fi eld. Extensive movement had been taken-in. As the tensions between
elements involved were taking their time to play out, the determinate
seeing of the scrim was rising toward the threshold of conscious awareness.
The work is not the scrim. It is not the room. It is the perception of the
perception-of-perception ’ s complex becoming consciously determinate, in
an amodal collaboration between seeing and extensive movement.
The perception of perception occurring is not the subjective viewpoint
of the gallery visitor. The experience takes: it takes its own time; it takes
elements into itself; and it takes in the catalytic sense of an effect setting
in, or the combustive sense of a slow detonation. The experience belongs
not to any one element, but to their coming-together in just this way. It
comes of a “ nexus ” (Weschler 1982, 64). The human element of the gallery
visitor is, to be sure, a privileged link in the nexus. But from the point of
view of the technique of existence taking expression, the human element
is less the center than the conduit for the expressive event ’ s culmination.
It is there for feeling the nexus (Whitehead 1978, 230), to give it determinate
subjective form. The experiential effect occurs to the visitor, as it occurs to
itself as its own event, through the conduit of the visitor. The effect wells
up from below the threshold of human awareness. It comes to pass the
threshold in its way, following its own rhythm, when it is ready to set in.
It — the event-nexus — expresses its own coming-together, as it passes
through its human-channeled bringing-itself-into-perceptual-focus. This
makes the experience integrally ecological.
That the event is ecological does not mean that it is “ natural ” as
opposed to cultural. It takes in elements classifi able as natural (the physiol-
ogy of the human body, the physics of light and materials) in a way that
effectively fuses them with cultural elements. The coming-together draws
on a nature-culture continuum. What are normally considered elements
166 Chapter 4
of cultural mediation enter as directly into the ecological nexus as any
other element. In becoming-immanent to the event of expression, they
become immediate contributory forces. They are immediated . It is no con-
tradiction to say that the experiential effect is directly and immediately
felt following its own immanent rhythm, and to note the degree to which
cultural convention and codings contribute to its eventuating. It is only
because the viewer is familiar with the conventional layout of a room and
with the architectural codes of gallery buildings that this process is able to
occur. Both the initial throwing-off of perception upon entry into the
room, and the fi nal determination of the singularity of the room, depend
on this familiarity. The experiential event ’ s playing-out plays on the very
conventions, articulate readings, and ingrained habits that the experimen-
tation with painting had so concertedly fi ltered out.
Semblance of a Truth (the Bleed)
The immediation of the cultural, drawn into a continuum with the natural
toward a nexus-expressing event, makes it possible to begin adding ele-
ments back in without losing the directness of intensity of experience that
Irwin was after from the start. His tendency toward subtraction could now
reverse itself while continuing the same movement toward increasing
intensity. The work could go into hallways and staircases, then exit build-
ings, lodging itself in the spaces between them, as well as into gardens and
groves. Fusion-effectiveness unlimited. Irwin had de-limited his own prac-
tice. Its intensity bled outward in ever-expanding circles, like an inkspot
on absorbant paper, or an oil spot on pavement. Its technique of existence
absorbed itself into its surroundings, irridescing across their surface.
Even before the artwork moves out into the world, it already carries an
ambulatory effect. When you leave one of the scrim installations, an after-
effect follows you. You feel yourself thinking-feeling differently as you exit
the gallery and walk down the street. The feeling of perceiving perception ’ s
occurring to itself stays with you. There is something a little odd about the
perspective of the street. You are aware of thinking-feeling the depths of
the city as you walk and look. The constitutive collaboration between
vision and proprioception is still refl ecting itself in an ongoing of its event.
There is an odd feeling, like a very faint d é j à vu, that you are double-
experiencing the world. You are consciously experienced the semblancing
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, Fourth Movement 167
of experience — its double order; your double existence — that normally
remains in the nonconscious background of everyday life. Perception feels
itself renewed. Because your experience is tarrying in its nascency. This is
powerfully suggestive, but nonspecifi cally. This should make a difference.
Could make a difference. But how? Which difference? Could/should: specu-
lative . How/which?: pragmatic . Walking down the street has rebecome
speculatively pragmatic, in a way that is immediately thought-felt. The
artwork has already made a difference. An incipient difference, in the
dynamic form of a semblance of an ecological truth. What is left is to see
how or if it will continue to play out, taking-in other elements, playing-
on other familiarities, conventions, articulate readings, immediating its
way out and down world-lines yet to be invented.
Politicality
The way Mahler composed music is singularly-generically different from
the way that Irwin composes with vision. The differences between their
practices, qualitatively-relationally speaking, have little to do with the
mere fact of working in classifi ably different media in which different sense
modalities are foregrounded. Mahler works with sound. That goes without
saying. The real question is, what else ? 20 What else enters into hearing
through his work? We are getting somewhere in our understanding of the
manner of expressive event at issue at the point that the orchestral sight
of a mountain is heard. Irwin spent decades painting, purely painting,
painting and nothing but. Yes, but … what else? 21 We are beginning to get
a grasp on the techniques of existence he was investigating when the
pigment bled into the streets and the process that had been purely painting
went for a walk.
The evaluation of a practice of expression must grapple with the “ how ”
of its process. It must grapple with understanding the “ which ” of the dif-
ferences occurring through the phases of the process as it transformationally
unfolds. The issue is the hows and whiches of creative change . The how is
not reducible to the functioning of whatever technology is involved. The
technology is a contributory element to the comings-together affected by
a technique of existence whose appetite always takes-in many an extra of
multiple kinds. It is only because the technique of existence is an art of
life that the technology it involves can be an aliveness engine. The “ which ”
168 Chapter 4
is not reducible to a difference in content. Its question concerns vitality
affects more primordially than contents, and affective tonalities more sug-
gestively than categories.
Processually speaking, Mahler fell on the same side as Irwin in their
shared project of purifying their art of content. They differed in their strate-
gies for how to deal with the eternal tendency of content to return, and
how to maintain the experiential intensity of the events of expression to
be composed.
Mahler composed-away for an absoluteness of music. He effected a
singular becoming-sound of extra-musical elements. However, he did this
in a way that was not apt to lead outside musical activity as he and his
time generically knew it. Leakage into the surroundings of the music hall
was included-out, even as the surroundings were grandiosely taken-in. The
becoming of orchestral music he invented was designed to be self-returning .
He peculiarly altered the vitality affects of musical activity, but retained its
affective tonality as music. He fi gures prominently in the annals of music
history.
Irwin ’ s process of composing-away extra-elements in painting phased
out into the surroundings. It continued into composings-with. His peculiar
alterations in the vitality affects of painting launched themselves into an
evolution that led them to become integrally other. The affective tonality
of the undertaking was constantly under investigation at the same time as
the techniques for modulating vitality affects (means of creatively imbuing
the artwork with occurrent perceptual “ energies ” ). His process extended
itself through phase shifts. It was continually moved to dephase itself,
morphing to a next phase. Irwin ’ s place in art history will likely be long
contested (painter? sculptor? installation artist? light artist? spatial artist?
gardener?).
Mahler ’ s technique of existence insistently rephased on a becoming
more intensely and absolutely itself. Irwin ’ s dephased toward becoming
more expansively other, without ever compromising on the purity of its
own aim for intensity. Mahler invented a new mode of musical perception,
keeping it tightly wound around itself, and without highlighting the per-
ception of that perception. Irwin invented new modes of perception in
expanding circles while foregrounding the perception-of-perception at
every step, making the pure act of expression expansively self-referential
rather than tightly self-returning. Mahler embraced the speculative
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, Fourth Movement 169
production of a universe of music. Irwin ’ s speculative creativity went
ambulatory in the world in a way that intensely foretraced pragmatic
movements in urban potential.
These processual differences are far more crucial to understanding Mah-
lerian and Irwinian expressive events as aesthetic techniques of existence
than is any conventional analysis of their formal style or art-historical
approach to their ostensible content. Processual differences precede content
and exceed formalism . They precede content in the nascency of the experi-
ential event. This nascency always concerns an avidity of appetition, a lure
to intensity, an activity of coming-together, before it concerns the determi-
nation of a content (if it comes to that at all). They exceed form defi nition
in the self-fl oating of a nonsensuous similarity that passes, the moment it
is produced, into an extra-being of continual qualitative-relational
differencing.
How can it not be recognized that these aesthetic processual differences
are at one and the same time political ? It makes a political difference
whether a process revolves around a self-returning becoming or a becom-
ing-other. It makes a political difference, when a process reaches its termi-
nus, whether the surroundings remain composed-away, or whether the
composing-away teaches itself to go-with so that the surroundings out back
in. It makes a political difference to what extent a technique of existence
negotiates its relation to its own activity: whether or in what way it extends
itself into the perception-of-perception. It makes a political difference how
it acts speculatively, which is to say, how it navigates the speculative-
pragmatic duplicity of all experience.
Potentially. All of this makes a difference potentially. This is about
potential politics. But then, a potential politics is a politics of potential.
And what politics is not about potential? Qualitative-relational potential.
Of forms of life in the making.
A form of life was defi ned earlier as “ a complex manner of being/being
able/knowing/wanting, appearing eventfully together in virtual mutual
inclusion. ” “ Under conditions of change ” is implicit in the defi nition. Also
understood was that the “ being ” was its own event: a being of becoming.
A technique of existence is the operator of a form of life as a mode of
becoming. The events that are according to its operation, are its creatures.
The operation of a technique of existence is a mode of composition. The
compositional process is ontogenetic : concerning the appearing of forms of
170 Chapter 4
life. If politics is about the potential animating forms of life, then it is
essentially bound up with the operation of techniques of existence. That
its activity is compositional and ontogenetic makes it more fundamentally
creative than regulative, inventive more than interpretive. The notion that
the complex manner constituting a form of life appears in “ virtual ” mutual
inclusion immediately raises the question of amodal experience and non-
sensuous similarity — placing the problem of lived abstraction at the heart
of the political.
We are now speculatively-pragmatically beyond the point of no return
for separating the aesthetic from the political. Political vocabulary will
have to expand to deal with issues such as how qualities of movement
detach from combinations of objective forms in encounter. How the
movement of events continues virtually “ behind ” where it goes, and
“ beyond ” where it stops. How nonlocal linkages spontaneously detach
from the changing location of things. How they enter into qualitative-
relational congress in a universe of their own constitutional order. How
the world is governed by a double order of synchresis and concrescence
playing on and off each other. How all being is integrally both: double
play, double existence. This gives a whole new meaning to the term
“ political duplicity. ”
The “ politics of aesthetics ” does not only have to do with “ distributions
of the sensible ” (Ranci è re 2006). More intensely, more inventively, and
more powerfully, it has to with distributions between the sensible and the
nonsensuous: the double aesthetico-political economy of experience. Aes-
thetic issues of how the world ’ s double synchretic/conscrescent ordering
is creatively negotiated, such as those just mentioned concerning self-
returning, becoming-other, and the occurrent self-referentiality of pure
acts of expression, become core criteria for thinking the political. They do
not only apply to activities conventionally categorized as belonging to the
actual domain of art (as defi ned in relation to recognized art institutions
and the art market). They apply to all domains, including those defi ned
as political in the conventional sense (electoral politics, grassroots politics,
the media through which political images and discourses circulate). These
aesthetically political criteria relevant to all techniques of existence in what-
ever domain add up an aesthetic criterion of politicality at the core of the
speculative pragmatist approach. The speculative-pragmatic criterion of
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, Fourth Movement 171
politicality concerns the most basic technical question raised by the events
of the world ’ s double ordering.
That question is, what is to be done? … . with content. In what way will
the technique of existence play content between synchresis and concres-
cence? Will it empty its process of content, suspending itself in its content-
readiness, and if so, to what nonsensuous ends? If the technique suspends
its process in content-readiness, how far will it take the suspension and
how long will it maintain it? Into what Time of transformation will the
technique of existence compose its content away? To the intensive end?
Will it plant ways for its buds to resprout? If so, into what new concres-
cences, following what new world – lines, will they bourgeon? Or will the
process revert to existing world-lines, tried and true?
The speculative-pragmatic “ what is to be done? ” orients the question
in starkly contrasting directions to Lenin ’ s question of the same wording.
Lenin ’ s question begged for an answer along the (party) lines of: order
from without. The force of the speculative-pragmatic question orients
toward the bringing to expression of immanent forces of existence. Lenin ’ s
question was political in the way in which it admitted of only one
“ correct ” solution, gesturing to quite a different sense of “ force. ” The
speculative-pragmatic question is not a political question in the same way.
It is a question of political ity . Its answers are potentially many, each
self-deciding from within a process ’ s immanent movement of self-
formation. The speculative-political criterion of politicality concerns the
intensity with which a process lives itself out. It is not concerned with
how the process measures up to a prefi xed frame of correct judgment
applied to it from without. It concerns the intensity of a form of life ’ s
appetite to live qualitative-relational abstraction creatively, as an imma-
nent measure of its changing powers of existence: forces for becoming.
The “ aim at intensity of feeling ” as part of a “ creative advance ” into
novelty understood as “ an aesthetic fact ” is, after all, Whitehead ’ s “ ulti-
mate ” criterion for all process (Whitehead 1978 20, 277 – 279). Politicality
in this sense is not incidental to the metaphysical reality of process.
It is no add-on or afterthought. It comes fl ush with the ultimate meta-
physical questions. These, as he repeatedly asserts, are of a cosmological
order. This implies there is politics even where there is no human. He
famously refers to the “ democracy ” of trees (1967a, 206.) At the limit,
172 Chapter 4
speculative-pragmatic politicality plays itself out in relation to the more-
than human: cosmopolitics (Stengers 1997).
The Processual Poverty of Making Statements
If the intensity of a form of life ’ s grappling with the eternal return of
content constitutes its politicality, then techniques of existence that fail
to grapple with it, or refuse to, are apolitical. The more political a technique
of existence is, the more inventively iterative it is. It self-phrases, following
a rhythm of repeated differencings with a characteristic momentum. It
phases, dephases, and rephases, taking its own time, setting in as it will.
It eventfully self-expresses . A technique mobilizing less intense politicality
makes statements instead. It ’ s all “ about. ” It purports to express in extra to
its own occurrence — as opposed to in the excess of it. It is content to point
to extra-elements as lying outside its process, often as if they lay outside
of all process. Common sense and good sense do this. Opinion does this.
Doctrine does it also. They go on “ about ” things. They refer and represent,
designate and demonstrate, symbolize and signify. They point the fi nger
and pound the fi st. They go on as if pure demonstration were possible.
This amounts to a demonstrative denial of process. It is to take things as
already where they are and what they are, already made, sitting pretty in
a preassumed form, determinately and determinedly just taking up space
in a crowded world, slothfully residing on location, if not still, then not
moving too fast to point the fi nger at, before any thinking even begins to
be felt. If change is on the agenda, ways must be found to add it back in.
The sloth of the world must be stirred to action, following a demonstra-
tively sound program “ realistically ” taking as its point of departure the
prelocated “ where ” and predefi ned “ what ” of things, rather than the
“ how ” and “ which ” of the process (of everything always already under
transformation). Apoliticality starts from general statements like “ That ’ s
just the way it is ” and “ Be realistic. ” If it moves ahead from there, it is on
the shuffl ing crutches of a tired “ ought ” — one often refl ecting a sense of
how things used to be, in the old days when they were really sitting pretty.
“ That ’ s the way things were ” / “ that ’ s that way things ought to be ” . . . so
stop fi dgeting and be realistic, already. Apoliticality ’ s arc, in its conservative
expression, is from the inertia of the real back to the future. In its revolu-
tionary expression, it is equally concerned with backing the future into
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, Fourth Movement 173
conformity with a past: just a recent past of directive decision by a van-
guard. In either case, the appetite is for subordinating activity to statement,
and statement to program. This way of doing “ politics ” is at best program
proud. It is always process poor — and for that reason, qualifi es speculative-
pragmatically as apolitical (acosmopolitical).
The provocation of the speculative-pragmatic criterion of politicality is
that it evaluates what conventionally passes precisely as political as intensi-
ties of the apolitical: programmatic statement. This characterizes ideologi-
cal and party platforms, reform programs, concrete goal-oriented lobbying
efforts, doctrine-centered movements, as embodying the acosmopolitical,
to one degree or another, however “ political ” they are in stated aim and
however “ revolutionary ” they may be in programmatic content. The chal-
lenge of speculative-pragmatism ’ s criterion of politicality to political think-
ing is that it does not obey the traditional categories of the Right-Left,
radical – conservative, that are conventionally applied to programmatic-
statement based techniques of existence. With the respect to language, the
criterion of politicality pertains much less to its usefulness for making
statements than to the degree to which a technique of existence avails
itself of its imaginative powers : its ability to marshal powers of the false, not
in order to designate the way things are but to catalyze what ’ s to come,
emergently, inventively, un-preprogrammed and refl ective of no past
model. This is the power of language to perform virtual events of foretracing.
Its speculative-pragmatic power to produce a truth. It is a directly perfor-
mative power, compelling without the crutch of the programmatic. It is
an invocative power. A “ magic ” power to invoke relational realities into
world-lining.
What language handles, as a technique of existence for the production
of virtual events, are not semantic contents. Neither are they are codes of
content or syntaxes for content formation. Nor symbolic meaning. Nor
metaphorical associations. What language as a technique of existence
processes, directly and immediately in lived abstraction, is the eventful
singularity of vitality affects, and the mode of their mutual transformative
inclusion in generic affective tonalities. Politicality is always, on its leading
edge, affective (Massumi 2005; Massumi 2009, 157 – 158, 173; Massumi
2010a). The Right has radically understood this, parlaying its strongly
performative thinking-feeling of affective politicality into a thirty-year
march that has many a produced pragmatic truth to show for the
174 Chapter 4
processual effort, and shows no signs of losing speculative momentum.
The “ apolitical ” may well be conservative, but the “ conservative ” Right
can be outright radical.
Praising the aesthetico-political powers of language performance is in
no way a dismissal of the power of other techniques of existence, in other
registers, to produce virtual events of a political kind. The audiovisual
image register is of arguably greater power today, thanks to the ever-
intensifying integration of the activity of its “ aliveness engines ” into every
aspect of life (through cable and satellite television, the Internet, cell
phones, and all manner of digital platforms for their technical conver-
gence). The important consideration is that all registers or modalities of
experience already virtually contain each other in bud, and that all of the
technologies contributing to the iterative production of their infi nitely
repeated events of variation, as well as all of the techniques of existence
working through these technologies, only perform by forming nexuses of
their coming-together to experiential effect. Politicality is always an eco-
logical question of mutual inclusion which, given the infi nity of elements
on offer, is always vitally selective: involving an event-economy of taking-
in and out-treating, to determinate experiential effect. The extent to which
and the way in which the occurrent perceptual effects are determined to
be human-channeled is a key evaluative variable. It is the variable that
connects the processual ecology of forms of life to ecology in the environ-
mentalist sense.
Art Statement
Art, we all know, is quite capable of making statements too, and often does.
One traditional way it does this is by affi xing programmatic language to
itself in the form of an “ artist ’ s statement ” accompanying the artwork and
extra to its event. Another is the manifesto. There is also the gesture of
including political messages within the work. Taking the speculative-
pragmatic criterion of politicality at the letter, these techniques would
not be accounted as particularly political. In relation to the speculative-
pragmatic criterion of aesthetic force (the fusion-effect constituting a sem-
blance), they would not come off a particularly artistic either. They may
well be ways of not grappling with the eternal return of content, the litmus
test of politicality for this approach.
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, Fourth Movement 175
They may well be depoliticizing — not in spite of their content but because
of their stating it. But this should not be prejudged solely on the basis of the
form the use of language takes. It is important not to prejudge according to
any preset criteria, especially the speculative-pragmatic ones. For the issue for
this approach is not the form of the work per se (its recognized genre or
conventional gestures), nor even its pointing outside itself toward extra-
event content as such. Whatever elements enter the event, the issue is the
force of their becoming immanent to it, toward the self-detachment of a
fusional effect having a dynamic form and affective tonality, animate
quality and intensity, singularly-generically its own. Whether the work has
this depends not on the “ what ” of the different elements that enter, but on
the “ how ” of their differential coming-together. This cannot be prejudged,
only experienced. The ways in which the conditions have been prepared will
have a lot to say about it performatively. The strategies of composing-away
and composing-with, and the economy of their mutual coming together
(and holding part), will also be determining. The mere presence of statement
says nothing of semblance. It must be remembered always that evaluative
“ criteria ” are just that — criteria for evaluation, not rules of judgment. The
criteria suggested here are heuristic devices for evaluating the aesthetic
intensity and politicality of an expressive event. The evaluation bears on the
occurrent singularity of the process , not on the value of the product by any
conventional measure or yardstick of taste or correctness. If these be rules,
they are rules of thumb, not instructions for fi nger pointing.
The “ Beautiful Semblance ”
Benjamin ’ s theory of the semblance, from which the present essay took
off many unfolded phases ago, is quite conscious of the traditional equa-
tion in the history of aesthetic theory between beauty and semblance, and
between beauty and truth. He accepts the “ famous tenet that beauty is
semblance ” (Benjamin 2002, 137). He even accepts that semblance is
inseparable from truth (Benjamin 1996c, 224). But not, of course, without
discomfort. For a beautiful thing has “ semblance because it is alive in one
sense or another ” (1996c, 283; emphasis added). The problem is that there
are devitalizing truths: the -truth truths.
Benjamin suggests concealment as the criterion for distinguishing
between enlivening and deadening semblances. It is a question, again, of
176 Chapter 4
content. Semblances of a certain artistic kind make gestures of revealing a
content that lies beneath their surface. They reveal that depth in the very
gesture of veiling it. For theirs is a surface beauty in the sense of a “ mere ”
appearance. It is only signifi cant for what lies behind it. So mere is its
appearance that in one sense it covers the true content. But its superfi ciality
is at the same time the only way of accessing the depth of truth. Its sem-
blance is an uncovering cover for a demure truth.
The depth of truth is reticent because it is nonsensuous, in a certain way.
Not the singularly occurrent way that has been the concern of this essay. It
is nonsensuous in the unchanging way of a truth eternal. This is the kind
of art that critics will say reveals something “ universal ” about the human
condition. The truth will typically be of the human predicament, of what
it “ means ” to be a person. It could, however, be a truth of nature ’ s “ univer-
sal ” order (its acosmopolitial order). Or a sovereign truth. Whatever. But
whatever the truth is of, it is of it in the utmost general sense. The truth is
not really in a necessary state of concealment because of its nonsensuous
character — but rather due to its utmost generality. As we have seen, the
nonsensuous is precisely that which appears . The occurrent singularity of a
nonsensuous similarity that detaches from a sensuous surface to fl oat in a
“ space ” that is a Time of change, can be (cannot but be) perceptually felt.
The “ universal ” generality of the truth beneath the surface can never be so
felt. It is of the general kind of abstraction that holds no immediacy, so
heavily it sits in its eternity. It cannot intensely return to the surface through
gesture. It can only be gestured to , superfi cially. It can only be indirectly
evoked, the more portentously the better. The surface sensuous forms of the
artwork ’ s composition are the only perceptual mode of access to the depths.
They must point to a beyond of their world — but not to a qualitative-rela-
tional universe of transformation that is duplicitously one with the event.
What makes these truth-revealing sensuous forms evocative is their
beauty, defi ned in a specifi c way: as a harmony of the sensuous forms
involved (Benjamin 1996c, 224). The harmony of sensuous forms recalls
the perfect order of the eternal truth beneath and beyond. It repeats its
form , and in so doing brings its principle of order to sensuous experience.
The beauty renders perceptible a hidden content in a formal resemblance. This
makes the harmony of sensuous forms the symbol of the truth. Deadening
semblance is formally-contentful symbolic semblance.
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, Fourth Movement 177
Semblance, made symbolic, forgets again that resemblance is produced
and that it pertains only to the singularity of events. Operating symboli-
cally, beauty presupposes, in harmony, a principle of formal resemblance
that is generally prior to the artwork, which then takes this general prece-
dence as its organizing principle. Composition becomes subordinated once
again to an a priori principle of resemblance. Resemblance comes before
the event, and takes precedence over it. It takes a certain amount of
acquired interpretive skills, what Irwin called “ articulate reading, ” for the
viewer to become a competent party to the symbolic reference. With the
precedence of resemblance comes the dominance of interpretation . When
the meaning uncovered through interpretation is said to be “ universal, ”
read “ generally legible ” : truly evocative to a typical member of a given
community, of a given class, with a given educational level, in a given
period. With the dominance of interpretation comes the consensual
tyranny of cultural standards as applied to art.
Benjamin comments that the beautiful semblance, as mere appearance
providing an uncovering cover for a universal truth, already belonged to
a bygone age at the time of his writing in the fi rst half of the twentieth
century. Yet it remained an issue for him, and he came back to the ques-
tion of the beautiful semblance over many years. Presumably, this was
because there were contemporary practices that still owed something to
this manner of semblance-making. There still are. Echoes of the beautiful
semblance can be heard loud and clear in the words of Martha Graham
quoted earlier. Any work that primarily defi nes its effect as simply or purely
evocative — as “ poetic ” in a symbolic sense or as “ metaphorical ” — is in the
business of the beautiful semblance. Its “ universality ” and “ depth ” will be
praised to high consensual heaven. In the twentieth and twenty-fi rst cen-
turies, the truths uncovered are almost invariably of the human condition,
with a fi rst-person address. The exhortation is to “ identify ” : the principle
of resemblance still takes precedence, and is still taken by the artwork as
its organizing principle, but now the resemblance is to be taken personally,
in the fi rst-person universal (I, Everyman). Truth morphs into “ authentic-
ity. ” Articulate reading becomes far less important. To identify, all you need
is personal feeling, and everybody human of any station presumably has
that. Personal feeling: emotion. The universal reign of emotional generality
claims the content of art.
178 Chapter 4
Benjamin comes back to the issue of the beautiful semblance because
his discomfort with it is political. The issue here is that of failing or refus-
ing to grapple with the paradox of content with respect to the semblance,
with deadening effect on the politicality of art.
Quivering Life
There is not just one kind of beautiful semblance. There are different
“ degrees ” of beautiful semblance, of very different aesthetic and political
force. The scale is “ determined not by the greater or lesser degree of beauty
but by the extent to which a thing has more or less the character of sem-
blance ” (Benjamin 1996c, 224, all quotes below 224 – 225). There is in
beauty a sliding scale of semblance that moves between two poles. At one
end is the apoliticality of the semblance whose beauty evokes the -truth of
its content. At the other end, there is the “ semblance in which nothing
appears ” — which is its own appearing, and whose appearing isn ’ t a “ mere ”
appearance but a sui generis event.
The scale is the scale of aliveness : “ In an artifact of beautiful semblance,
the semblance is all the greater the more alive it seems. ” Semblance and
aliveness are indissociable. There is always “ life quivering ” in the event of
the semblance. Bare activity (James 1996a, 160 – 162; Massumi 2009, 170 –
173; Massumi 2010a). Pure activity of life, abstractly appearing with all the
reality of an intensive event.
“ Quivering life is never symbolic. ” But it can be forcibly contained in
harmony and its symbolic associations. When it is, the harmony “ trem-
bles ” with life, but does not release it. It channels it toward the truth, to
which it gives a sheen, a beautiful shimmer. Symbolism contains abstract
life-intensity in the truth. It slides the artwork toward the deadening apo-
litical pole of the scale. Art, and life, must then be wrenched from that
pole by “ critical violence. ”
Critical violence consists in “ arresting ” the beautiful semblance. “ Inter-
rupting ” its trembling for truth. “ Petrifying ” it, “ paralyzing ” it, holding it
“ spellbound. ” The retrograde movement of the truth is suspended . The
expression of the truth hesitates, unable to complete the evocative retreat
into the depths of reference. The a priori principle of resemblance waivers.
Harmony is no longer guaranteed and authorized by it, so the truth is
no longer uncovered by its surface veil. Symbolism and metaphor are
Arts of Experience, Politics of Expression, Fourth Movement 179
composed-away. The dialectic of covering-uncovering ceases. Life quivers
all the more intensely perceptually-felt, in a “ compelling ” openness of
indetermination regained.
Life again unlimited, its semblance no longer under sentence to express
a general truth or personal feeling. Art at the highest degree of the “ expres-
sionless. ” Bare activity of expression. “ No defi nite direction, no actor, no
aim ” other than its own intensity (James 1996a, 160). The unlimiting of
life ’ s quiver releases the force of all the intensity that had been contained.
The opening onto bare activity is explosive, “ shattering ” the work “ into
fragments, reducing it to the smallest totality of a semblance. ” A smallest
totality, explosively produced: a totally singular dynamic unity. Benjamin ’ s
“ expressionless ” is what was here called “ pure expression ” : an intensity-
expressing experiential event that is wholly and only its own self-fl oating
occurrence.
The theory of the beautiful semblance, Benjamin says, is not just about
art in the narrow sense. He makes it clear that it is also about politicality,
and says explicitly that is “ essential for metaphysics ” as well. In his explo-
sive fragment of a semblance as “ smallest totality, ” we can see James ’ s little
absolute of “ immediately given relation ” (James 1996b, 280; see this book ’ s
introduction). The semblance was defi ned in chapter 2 as a little absolute,
which was in turn affi rmed as the fundamental metaphysical reality from
the perspective of a radical empirical philosophy and its twin sister specula-
tive pragmatism. The little absolute, James was quoted as saying, includes
its own other in its event in such a way that any identity it might be
attributed, by whatever means, symbolic or otherwise, “ telescopes and
diffuses into other reals ” (James 1996b, 272). Metaphysico-politically.
Cosmopolitically.
Benjamin seems to agree. But he insists on the metaphysico-political
point, also grappled with by radical empiricism and speculative pragma-
tism, that immediately given relation is a nonrelation. “ The expression-
less, ” Benjamin writes, is that critical violence which, “ while unable to
separate semblance from truth in art, prevents them from mingling. ” The
composing-away of truth and content is actually a kind of separative
composing-with: together, but separate, disjunct, in differential tension.
Intensely, duplicitously. Synchretically-conscrescently.
Is “ critical violence ” but a duplicitous way of explosively holding in
reserve buds of content for a blossoming to come? Does the “ the power of
180 Chapter 4
the expressionless ” tend already toward a “ telescoping and diffusing into
other reals ” — coming potentials a world-walk away from that explosive
non-place of art as a place only of changes? Might the suspension
of the beautiful semblance give the expressionless legs? The better to world-
line with? Does quivering life struck with “ critical violence ” bleed expand-
ing life?
Conclusion
“ No work of art can appear completely alive without becoming mere sem-
blance, and ceasing to be a work of art ” Benjamin (1996c, 224).
Notes
Introduction
1. Although Whitehead and James privilege the concept of activity in highly con-
sonant ways, they differ on the vocabulary of “ bare activity. ” Whitehead uses the
term in a sense opposed to James ’ s and adopted here from James. Whitehead uses
“ bare activity ” to refer to the Newtonian notion of matter, according to which
matter can be understood purely in terms of its occupancy of space and its extensive
movements in space at an instant. By this reckoning, matter can be understood
“ without reference to any other instant, or to any other piece of matter, or to any
other region of space. ” It is essentially without relation, and being without relation
is of itself without importance (Whitehead 1968, 146 – 147). This is the “ fallacy of
misplaced concreteness ” mentioned later in this introduction. Its effect is to separate
matter from life. Both James and Whitehead agree in their refutation of this approach
in favor of concepts of event, change, potential, and creativity that implicate matter
in life and life in matter, and both in mentality, such that neither can be purifi ed
of its involvement in the other. For a recent approach moving in consonant philo-
sophical directions, see Bennett (2010).
2. One of the most compressed expressions of this in Whitehead is: “ The process
through which a feeling passes in constituting itself also records itself in the subjec-
tive form of the integral feeling ” (Whitehead 1978, 226). Compare Deleuze and
Guattari ’ s “ second synthesis ” of process, that of the “ production of recording ” (the
third being the culmination of “ enjoyment ” ) (Deleuze and Guattari 1983, 9 – 21).
3. Another paradox is not dealt with extensively in what follows but bears mention-
ing for reasons of precision regarding Whitehead ’ s vocabulary. It concerns the
concept of change. If an occasion of experience is absolutely its own event of self-
creation, then it is misleading to refer to it as a change (Whitehead 1978, 35).
Considered in itself, in its little-absoluteness, it has only its own sheer becoming,
as the mutual inclusion of its phases in each other. To call it a change implies a
comparison between a before and an after. But an occasion of experience is all in
its own occurrence. It is entirely absorbed its own singularly happening sheerness.
182 Notes
An occasion of experience is unchanging because it is absolutely its own becoming:
sheer production of novelty. Strictly speaking, for Whitehead, “ change ” makes sense
only as applied to how novel occasions of experience succeed one another. Change
occurs between occasions of experience, and it is the differential between them that
allows it to be said that a change has taken place, which is what constitutes an
event. For Whitehead, an occasion of experience considered in its own dynamic
unity of becoming is not the model for the concept of event. A single occasion of
experience, Whitehead says, is a limit-case event: a “ limit type of event with one
member ” (Whitehead 1978, 73). The occasion of experience ’ s becoming is but the
minima of happening. Even so, a limit-case event is still an event, however mini-
mally. Actual occasions are after all called occasions . As important as these precisions
are metaphysically, they are not focused on in this book. The technical Whitehead-
ian distinctions between event and experience of occasion, and between becoming
and change, were not necessary for its project. The usage here conforms more to
Deleuze and Deleuze and Guattari, for whom event, becoming, and change come
together (Deleuze 1990; Deleuze and Guattari 1987). Whitehead ’ s “ sheer individual-
ity, ” its Jamesian little-absoluteness, are also read in a way that does not exclude
infoldings of chance encounters intervening during an occasion ’ s becoming. The
Whiteheadian justifi cation for this is the doctrine that an occasion of experience
includes in its own constitution the “ more ” of the world that lies beyond its indi-
viduality: “ each entity, of whatever type, essentially involves its own connection
with the universe of other things ” (Whitehead 1968, 66). The only way the inclusion
of the more-beyond can belong to the constitution of the occasion is in the form
of capacities of infolding (and techniques for bequeathing the formative activity of
this occasion to others — diagrams). The only way capacities can infold is if they are
at the same time affectabilities . Given the durational nature of the occasion of experi-
ence (Whitehead 1978, 125) and the always going on around of other durations,
the affective capacity for infolding must be operative on the fl y. There will always
be “ smaller ” durations knocking against the window like the wings of moths. The
aim of Whitehead ’ s principle of “ conceptual reversion ” is to take account of this.
According to this principle, “ there is a secondary origination of conceptual feelings
with data which are partially identical and partially diverse from ” the data in the
primary phase. “ In this second phase the proximate novelties are conceptually felt. ”
“ There is a conceptual contrast of physical incompatibilities. ” This leads to a “ sub-
sequent enrichment ” of the occasion (Whitehead 1978, 249). This is not in contra-
diction with the occurrent unity of the occasion ’ s sheer individuality. The unity of
an experience is the tendential arc of its occurrence through its phases. An occasion
of experience is not “ itself ” in the sense of a bounded unity or a closed totality. It
is a constitutively open dynamic unity, which is a function of its capacity to open
itself to self-modulation. Activist philosophy transforms monadism into transmo-
nadism (Guattari 1995, 112 – 116) and in the same stroke, converting “ autopoiesis ”
into “ heterogenesis ” (33 – 57). The phasing of the event of experience cannot be
indifferent to interference encountered en route. These must be taken up in the
Notes 183
event ’ s momentum as affordances. as reenergizations of its initial impulse as it arcs
toward its self-creative terminus. But it must be remembered that it is not the “ data ”
that are perceived in any usual sense of the term. The subjective form of the datum
is perceptually felt. In other words, what is “ perceived ” is the form of its activity.
The form of its activity strikes as interference and is taken in as resonance (see the
discussion of resonance in chapter 2). The concept of resonance enables a theoriza-
tion of secondary originations of an occasion on the fl y without contravening the
principle of the contemporary independence of actual occasions. Here, the conver-
sion of interference into resonance involves a nonsensuous perception by the event
under way of its affective co-implication with other events — an intuition of their
mutual immanence in each other ’ s arising. In Deleuze ’ s reading of Leibniz, the cor-
responding concept to the affective capacity of resonant infolding is the vinculum
(bond) — the “ unlocalizable primary link that borders the absolute interior ” of a
monad with its outside; “ a supple and adherent membrane coextensive with every-
thing inside ” that enables the event of experience to “ recover the other side, not as
exterior to the monad, but as the exterior or outside of its own interiority ” (Deleuze
1993, 111).
4. Deleuze and Deleuze and Guattari converge with Whitehead on this point:
Sensation fi lls out the plane of composition and is fi lled with itself by fi lling itself with what it contemplates: it is ‘ enjoyment ’ and ‘ self-enjoyment. ’ It is subject, or rather an inject . Plotinus defi ned all things as contemplations, not only people and animals but plants, the earth, rocks. These are not Ideas we contemplate through concepts but the elements of matter that we con-template through sensation. The plant contemplates by contracting the elements from which it originates — light, carbon, and the salts — and it fi lls itself with colors and odours that in each case qualify its variety, its composition: it is sensation in itself. It is as if fl owers smell themselves by smelling what composes them. (Deleuze and Guattari 1994, 212; see also Deleuze 1994, 74 – 75)
5. This reference to nonactualized potentialities complicates arguments that inter-
pret Whitehead ’ s philosophy as an actualism in stark opposition to Deleuze ’ s virtual-
ism. These general categories — like all general categories — are far too gross. They fail
to capture the complexity of these thinkers, or their kinships and divergences.
Whitehead ’ s reference to nonactualized potentialities is related to his concept of
negative prehension. Negative prehension is the selecting-out of potentials that will
not be positively taken into an occasion of experience ’ s unfolding. Whitehead
remarks that the exclusion of a potential, while not positively fi guring in the experi-
ence ’ s composition, has a “ defi nite ” impact on its subjective form. The potentials
are outed-into the dynamic unity of the forming experience. They are actively
abstracted out, but not without leaving a dent. This gives them a certain status in
the occasion ’ s actuality, qualifying them as being “ in act ” in defi nite trace form.
They still qualify as fully real, because Whitehead ’ s defi nition of reality states that
everything that is real is positively exemplifi ed somewhere, if not here and now.
This raises the question of the status of these excluded realities when they are else-
where and elsewhen. The category of pure potential is needed to account for this.
184 Notes
The virtual fulfi lls the same function in Deleuze ’ s philosophy. Pure potentialities, or
virtualities, even when they are elsewhere and elsewhen, exert an abstract pressure
on the actual. They are always-everywhere knocking on the door of actuality for
admission, and must be actively selected out if they are not to make ingress. In
Whiteheadian terms, we are talking about “ eternal objects. ” The corresponding term
in Deleuze is singularities, as defi ned in Logic of Sense (1990). The key passage in
Whitehead on the topic of negative prehension: “ An actual entity has a perfectly
determinate bond with each item in the universe. This determinate bond is its
prehension of that item. A negative prehension is the defi nite exclusion of that item
from positive contribution to the subject ’ s own real internal constitution. This
doctrine involves the position that a negative prehension expresses a bond. . . . Those
eternal objects which are not felt are not therefore negligible. For each negative
prehension has its own subjective form, however trivial and faint. It adds to the
emotional complex, though not to the objective data. The emotional complex is
the subjective form of the fi nal ‘ satisfaction ’ ” (Whitehead 1978, 41; emphasis
added). A negative prehension has the paradoxical status of an unfelt factor in feeling.
Chapter 1
1. Deleuze (1994, 245, 251 – 53) calls the object under this aspect the sign of a
“ remarkable point ” in the course of a “ dramatization. ”
2. For an excellent study of James ’ s philosophy consonant with this perspective
(and to which this account owes much), see David Lapoujade (1997).
3. This concept of belief as eventful, participatory immersion in the world ’ s ongoing
is shared by Gilles Deleuze, who calls it “ belief in this world ” : “ If you believe in the
world you precipitate events, however inconspicuous, that elude control, you engen-
der new space-times, however small their surface or volume ” (1995, 176; see also
Deleuze 1989, 172 – 173).
Chapter 2
1. On the world ’ s recasting as a “ gamespace ” through the interaction between
digital media with life at large, see McKenzie Wark (2007).
2. The distinction between seeing an object and seeing its likeness as developed
here corresponds roughly to Damasio ’ s distinction between “ feeling ” and “ feeling
feelings ” (1999, 278 – 281).
3. Erwin Panofsky, in his classic study of perspective, also emphasizes that we “ see
through ” the materiality of the pigment and canvas to experience in vision a sem-
blance of an infi nite geometric order of space: “ Perspectiva is a Latin word which
means ‘ seeing through. ’ . . . We shall speak fully of a ‘ perspectival ’ view of space
not when mere isolate objects, such as houses or furniture, are represented in
Notes 185
‘ foreshortening, ’ but rather only when the entire picture has been transformed — to
cite another Renaissance theoretician — into a ‘ window, ’ and when we are meant to
believe we are looking through this window into space. The material surface upon
which the individual fi gures or objects are drawn or painted or carved is thus
negated, and instead reinterpreted as a mere ‘ picture plane. ’ Upon this picture plane
is projected the spatial continuum which is seen through it and which is understood
to contain all the various individual objects ” (Panofsky 1991, 27).
4. Simondon (2007, 208) speaks of the immanence of relation in the context of
technical invention in terms that recall a number of the points about connectivity
and contemporary independence made here. He calls the immanence of relation
the dynamic “ ground ” ( fond ) of technical objects and their associated milieus: “ Per-
petually overlooked, the ground is what holds the dynamisms. It is what allows the
system of forms to exist. Forms do not participate with other forms, but rather
participate in the ground. The ground is the system of all forms or rather the
common reservoir of the tendencies of forms before they even exist as separate
entities and are constituted as an explicit system. The relationship of participation
connecting the forms to the ground is a relation that straddles the present and
imbues it with the potential infl uence of the future, with an infl uence of the virtual
on the actual. For the ground is the system of virtualities, potentials, and forces on
the way, whereas the forms constitute the system of the actual. Invention is a taking
in charge of the system of actuality by the system of virtualities. It is the creation
of one system from these two systems. Forms are passive inasmuch as they represent
actuality. They become active when they organize themselves in relation to the
ground, thus actualizing prior virtualities. ”
5. Readers able to read French are encouraged to refer to the original. The transla-
tion seriously obscures the complex play of Deleuze ’ s philosophical vocabulary
around the key concepts of “ actual/actualization ” (terms which tend to fall out) and
“ real/realization ” (variously translated). The original passages in question are in
Deleuze (1988b, 107 – 108).
6. For an account of an abstractly lived-in movement that is not abstract in the
sense of eschewing fi guration, but that doubles a fi gurative scene (primarily
of landscape), see Massumi (2003) on the panoramic photography of Luc
Courchesne.
7. For a rethinking of touch itself in a way that recognizes the centrality of kines-
thesia to all sensory experience, not only vision, see Manning (2007).
Chapter 3
1. For an interlocking account of color in its relation to other senses that focuses
on the relation to language, see Massumi (2002, 162 – 176).
186 Notes
Chapter 4
First Movement: To Dance a Storm 1. This is what Whitehead calls a “ conceptual prehension, ” in contradistinction to
a “ physical prehension. ” The basic difference is that a physical prehension entails
a “ conformation of feelings ” and a conceptual prehension introduces “ novelty ”
(here construed in terms of the production of a “ nonsensuous similarity ” ) (White-
head 1978, 26, 33, 238 and passim).
2. “ Universe ” here alludes to F é lix Guattari ’ s concept of “ incorporeal universes ”
(also called “ consciential universes, ” “ universes of value, ” and “ universes of refer-
ence ” ). By “ reference ” Guattari means not a semantic content or designated object
but rather a “ meta-modelization of transassemblage relations ” (Guattari 1989, 31).
The “ archive ” of nonsensuous similarity as analyzed in this essay is such a meta-
modelization, as directly lived. Guattari develops the theory of universes of reference
throughout Cartographies schizoanalytiques (1989). See also Chaosmosis (Guattari
1995), where the universe of reference is defi ned in terms of “ non-discursive incor-
poreal complexity ” (60). Guattari ’ s concept of “ universes ” is closely allied to Ruyer ’ s
concept of “ virtual domains ” (Ruyer 1952).
3. “ Form of life ” is being used here in a sense close to Agamben ’ s (2000), where
thought and vitality are one: “ by form-of-life . . . I mean a life that can never be
separated from its form, a life in which it is never possible to isolate something such
as naked life ” (3 – 4). “ I call thought the nexus that constitutes forms of life in an
inseparable context as form-of-life. I do not mean by this the individual exercise of
an organ or of a psychic faculty, but rather an experience, an experimentum that has
as its object the potential character of life and human intelligence. To think does
not mean merely to be affected by this or that thing, by this or that content of
enacted thought, but rather at once to be affected by one ’ s own receptiveness and
experience in each and every thing that is thought a pure power of thinking ” (9).
4. The genericness of the affective tonality is the nonconscious bud of what are
called the “ categorical affects. ” Categorical affects are genre of affective experience
that have come to be consciously named and identifi ed, and as a result are under-
stood as the subjective content of certain moments of experience. This separates
them from their eventness, from their sheer occurring, and makes them a noun.
This substantivizing as content renders them in certain respects communicable inde-
pendently of their event (disqualifying them from the status of form-of-life, as
defi ned by Agamben in note 3 above). Their separation from their own event deliv-
ers them to techniques of mediation . Mediatable affect is what in earlier work I have
termed “ emotion ” (Massumi 2002, 27 – 28). Emotion is a particular mode of abstrac-
tion from the full affective dimensionality of affective attunement. Its mediatability
makes it more accessible to conventional expression and manipulation, which in
many everyday situations makes it more salient. This can obscure the primacy and
Notes 187
ubiquity of vitality affects. In fact, their very ubiquity tends to background them in
many habitual situations. “ Vitality forms are hard to grasp because we experience
them in almost all waking activities. They are obscured by the felt quality of emo-
tions [the affective tonality that delivers them to content] as it accompanies them ”
(Stern 2010, 20). For a more prolonged discussion of the transition from affective
vital-eventness to emotional life-content, see Massumi (2005, 37 – 39). The singular-
generic was discussed above (chapter 2) in terms of the “ likeness ” of an object to
itself that makes each singular encounter with the object teem with a belonging to
others of its kind (the object as semblance). The discussion of the singular-generic
was aimed at understanding the way in which an object is actually of the nature of
an event (an iteration in an event-series, or developing world-line). In this chapter,
it is a question more directly of events, and semblances of events. The “ regions ” of
the nonsensuous universe of qualities of life are Ruyer ’ s virtual “ domains ” (which
he similarly defi nes in terms of nonlocal linkage, or in his vocabulary “ nonlocal
liaisons ” ) (Ruyer 1952, 95 – 131). Stern uses a concept of the singular-generic without
calling it that.
5. The parent-child example should not be misunderstood as suggesting a develop-
mental origin for amodal perception in the life of the individual. Quite the opposite.
Direct, nonsensuous perception of relation is the condition of emergence of the
individual itself. That condition of emergence follows the individual at every step,
doubling each objective coming-together of forms she encounters or participates in
with a “ sui generis ” experience of relation. From one encounter to the other, the
experience of relation changes — composing a sui generis experience of becoming .
This nonsensuous feeling of becoming is the feeling of being alive : vitality (Stern
2010). On the developmental question, Stern cites research demonstrating that
amodal perception is innate (1985, 38 – 42). His approach to developmental psychol-
ogy appeals to amodal perception to explain how a “ sense of self ” emerges relation-
ally, with the capacity to continue to become.
6. The creative power of language and thought can be considered hallucinatory as
opposed to delusional. There is a hallucinatory dimension to every experience to
the exact extent to which it is creative, and thus has no preconstituted object
(Deleuze 1993, 93). This hallucinatory power is the “ power of the false ” discussed
later.
7. The focus in this chapter on the ways in which language and thought go together
should in no way be read to imply that they must go together: that they are neces-
sarily bound to each other by nature. As the rest of this chapter will attempt to
show, nonsensuous event-traces can be manipulated nonverbally (in ritual, in
dance, in music, among other ways). These nonverbal operations qualify as thought
every bit as much as language-borne operations involving vitality affects and non-
sensuous similiarities do. There is true thought in nonverbal beings. This applies as
much to animals as to nonverbal humans, such as so-called “ low-functioning ”
188 Notes
autists. On animal thought, see Massumi (forthcoming a). On autistic thought and
experience, see Manning and Massumi (forthcoming a) and Manning (forthcoming
a). When thought and language do go effectively together, it is because each has
the power in its own right to operate virtually, and mechanisms are in place to
effectively combine their virtual powers. It should be noted that just as there are
modes of thought that are nonverbal, there also are uses of language divorced from
thought. Among these are conventional uses of language (of the kind falling under
the rubric of common sense), and uses of language for personal expression in a way
that is free of both delusion and effective ambulation (opinion).
8. There is not the space in this book to ground this discussion of ritual in a par-
ticular ritual tradition, which properly should be done in order to respect the sin-
gularity of techniques of existence. The understanding of ritual expressed here does,
however, come out of an engagement over many years with a singular ritual tradi-
tion, through my long collaboration with Kenneth Dean. Dean is an ethnographer
of esctatic popular religious practices of Fujian province in southern China. He has
followed in painstaking empirical detail the revival of the unique syncretism of the
region since the end of the Cultural Revolution (Dean 1998). He has recently supple-
mented his scholarly publications with a documentary fi lm, Bored in Heaven: A Film
About Ritual Sensation , for which I served as an adviser during the on-location shoot-
ing and editing (Dean 2010). The discussion of ritual here doesn ’ t begin to do justice
to the complexity of ritual practice and its creation of really experienced virtual
spaces that are eventfully productive of their own pragmatic truths. In the case of
Chinese ritual, one of its most egregious omissions on the speculative front is the
interplay between microcosmic and macrocosmic dimensions of cosmological space
enacted in bodily performance. On the pragmatic side, the worst omission is the
actuality of the practices — the fact that they are not archaic holdovers but are
actively, integrally, and co-constitutively intertwined with contemporary events
associated with the penetration of global capitalism into what was one of China ’ s
fi rst “ special economic zones ” opened to lead the transition from communism.
Second Movement: Life Unlimited 9. This is meant also to be taken as a critique of the principle of “ openness through
closure ” upon which the theory of autopoiesis is founded. The critique is that auto-
poiesis recurs to a theory of formal constitution (albeit of a nonrepresentational
variety) that is at philosophical odds with its ambition to theorize lived, and living,
genesis. What it lacks, for an effective theory of lived genesis, is a principle of non-
formal (qualitative-relational) experience as immediately ingredient in every opera-
tion of the world ’ s constitution. This could only be a principle of feeling (perceptual
feeling) understood as primary in relation to logical form, as well as any notion of
objective ordering it might authorize or guarantee. The philosophies of Peirce,
Whitehead, and Deleuze/Guattari are the most thorough-going metaphysical con-
structions mobilizing this principle: that the world is literally made of feeling,
Notes 189
uncontained by any a priori form or order, but at the vanishing point where feeling
enters into a zone of ontogenetic indistinction with thought.
10. What is being called a semblance here corresponds in many respects to what
Deleuze in Logic of Sense (1990) calls a “ simulacrum ” or “ pure effect. ” In Anti-Oedipus ,
Deleuze and Guattari (1983) give a distinctly ontogenetic spin to this concept of
simulation: “ Simulation . . . expresses those nondecomposable distances always
enveloped in intensities that divide into one another while changing their form.
. . . Simulation . . . is . . . strangely polyvocal, fl ush with the real. It carries the real
beyond its principle to the point where it is effectively produced . . . the point where
the copy ceases to be a copy in order to become the Real and its artifi ce . . . an
intensive real as produced in the coextension of nature and history ” (1983, 87).
Echoes of the present vocabulary ’ s “ differential attunement, ” “ mutual inclusion ” in
change, and transformational “ nonlocal linkage ” are audible in this passage.
11. This connects back to Deleuze ’ s concept of “ cleaving things asunder ” (Deleuze
1995, 86) and making a “ Sahara ” of them (Deleuze 2004b, 82, 128), discussed in
chapter 2.
12. It is on the concept of the “ space of the body ” that the present account departs
most signifi cantly from Jos é Gil ’ s brilliant theory of dance (Gil 2006), which is in
many other respects consonant with the approach suggested here.
13. Erin Manning in her work on dance emphasizes that this emptying of human
meaning and intention can free the nonhuman to dance. She develops the nonhu-
man dimension of dance events by elaborating on William Forsythe ’ s concept of a
“ choreographic object ” : an object that activates dance around itself. The choreo-
graphic “ object ” is not an object in the usual sense. It is a catalyzer of a fi eld of
movement. Any human bodies involved are involved only to the extent that they
are moved by the fi eld as much as they are self-moving (Manning 2009b, forthcom-
ing b). In Guattari ’ s vocabulary, the choreographic object is a nonhuman “ nucleus
of expression ” (1995).
Third Movement: The Paradox of Content 14. Whitehead discusses the affective tonality, or generic feel, specifi c to vision in
terms of a background awareness of a “ withness ” of the eyes immanent to every
visual perception (Whitehead 1978, 64). There is a “ withness ” of every sense, and
of the body as a whole (312 – 313), ingredient in every experience, and to which the
singular-genericness of the varying modes of experience is in large part owing.
15. See Andrew Murphie (2004) for a theory of “ differential media. ”
16. Whitehead (1967a, 236): “ The word Concrescence is a derivative from the
familiar Latin verb, meaning to ‘ grow together. ’ It also has the advantage that the
participle ‘ concrete ’ is familiarly used for the notion of complete physical reality.
Thus Concrescence is useful for conveying the notion of many things acquiring
190 Notes
complete complex unity. But it fails to suggest the creative novelty involved. For
example, it omits the notion of the individual character arising in the concreteness
of the aboriginal data [the ingredient elements]. ” The words synchresis, fusion-
effect, and nonsensuous similarity are used here to include the notion of the “ indi-
vidual character ” — the qualitative-relational singularity — of the complex unity of an
event of experience. The word “ together, ” Whitehead continues, “ is one of the most
misused terms in philosophy. ” The problem is that it is used “ as though it conveyed
one defi nite meaning, ” and also as if there were togetherness outside of experience.
In these uses, it is “ sophistical. ” For in fact “ no things are together except in experi-
ence; and no things are , in any sense of ‘ are, ’ except as components in experience
or as immediacies of process which are occasions of self-creation. ” Esse est sentiri : to
be is to be felt. To be is to be experienced. Or more radically: to be is to be experience .
Experience is not confi ned to the human, but is distributed across the nature-culture
continuum. Every thing is a being of experience. One of the implications for the
present approach of this way of thinking “ together ” is that, by Whitehead ’ s criteria,
what is termed “ interaction ” is a sophistical concept because it is not used to
connote ” immediacies of process. ” To the contrary, interaction is defi ned in terms
of objectively describable actions and reactions (technological functions) that
mediate experience (see chapter 2).
17. “ The Category of Subjective Intensity . The subjective aim, whereby there is origina-
tion of feeling, is at intensity of feeling in the immediate subject, and in the relevant
future ” (Whitehead 1978, 27). The “ ultimate creative purpose ” is that “ each unifi ca-
tion shall achieve some maximum depth of intensity of feeling, subject to the condi-
tions of its concrescence ” (249). This “ is the category whereby novelty enters the
world ” (249, see also 277 – 278).
Fourth Movement: Composing the Political 18. Deleuze and Guattari develop the principle that the multiple is always most
intensely and transformatively attained by creative subtraction (1987, 6, 21): “ Sub-
tract and place in variation, remove and place in variation ” (104). Deleuze (2004b)
charts this process at length in the work of the painter Francis Bacon.
19. Philosophically speaking, the notion of appetition and subjective aim assert the
need to add the long out-of-favor concept of “ fi nal causation ” to the metaphysical
picture again. In the present essay, fi nal causation comes back in the form of the
nonsensuous “ tending-toward ” a “ terminus. ” In reintroducing a certain notion of
fi nal causation, however, it is important to underline that the terminus as fi nal cause
is not suffi cient cause. It is co-causal, requiring the contribution of objective condi-
tions ( “ data ” in Whitehead ’ s terms) combined just so. It is this setting in place of
objective conditions, taken-together in a tending-toward a terminus, that consti-
tutes what is being called here a “ technique of existence. ” Of itself, the setting in
place of objective conditions is not an effi cient cause. The resulting theory of
Notes 191
causality is best described as a theory of “ quasi-causality ” (a hybrid between effi cient
and suffi cient causation, objective and fi nal causes; Massumi 2002, 225 – 228).
20. On the question “ What else? ” as asked by William Forsythe of dance, see Erin
Manning, “ Choreography as Mobile Architecture ” (in Manning forthcoming a).
21. In What Is Philosophy? , Deleuze and Guattari (1994) ask the “ what else? ” ques-
tion of philosophy. They theorize what is singularly generic about the activity of
philosophy, precisely in order to resituate it within a creative ecology of synchretic
relation with its “ non-philosophical ” outside. It is misreading the book to see it as
an argument for the “ particularity ” of philosophy: what makes it philosophy as
opposed to art, or logic, or science. The aim of the book is the opposite: to return
philosophy to an ecology of the what-else. To make a creative event of philosophy
as one technique of existence composing-with any number of others. A Thousand
Plateaus is the most intense example of this philosophical composing-with in their
combined works (Deleuze and Guattari 1987).
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Index
Absolute. See also Monarchy, absolute;
Music, absolute
great, 60
little, 20 – 21, 58 – 59, 61, 64, 179,
181 – 182
Abstract art, 69 – 72, 137 – 138,
159 – 162
Abstract cause, 60 – 61
Abstraction, 57, 63, 65, 93, 97, 99, 110,
125, 129, 161 – 162
concreteness and, 27, 70, 100 – 101,
148
diagram and, 14 – 15, 99 – 103
force and, 56 – 57, 141
formal, 130, 169
language and, 116 – 118
lived, 15 – 19, 26, 28, 42 – 43, 49, 74,
83, 103, 116, 126, 129 – 130, 143,
146 – 158, 173 ( see also Semblance)
nature and, 25, 82
object as, 6, 16, 27, 41 – 43, 74, 117,
185n3
self-, 44, 49, 53, 124, 125, 133,
140 – 141, 143, 148 – 149
vision and, 43 – 44, 97, 133
Abstract line, 17, 134. See also Edge
Accident, 62 – 63, 80
Action, 43, 66, 76, 117, 119, 125
nascent, 114 – 115, 120, 121, 122, 139,
160
Action-reaction, 44 – 47
Activation (energizing), 16, 71 – 72, 137,
159 – 161, 163
Activation contour, 107, 109 – 113, 115,
122 – 125
Activist philosophy, 1 – 28. See also
Radical empiricism; Speculative
pragmatism
on actual-virtual, 16 – 17, 183 – 184n5
nonhuman and, 25 – 26
as nonobject philosophy, 6
paradox and, 18 – 19
Activity, 1 – 6, 8, 16, 21, 26, 69, 84, 122,
169, 173, 183. See also Bare activity;
Interactivity
elemental, 24
general vs. special, 2, 13, 22 – 23, 28
of relation, 89 – 93, 97, 102, 104
Actual
as the “ in-act, ” 16, 18
virtual as inseparable from, 16, 18 – 19,
33, 58, 88, 90, 98, 150, 183 – 184n5,
185n4
Adorno, Theodor, 16
Aesthetic, 2, 24 – 25, 39 – 40, 77, 171. See
also Force, of expression (aesthetic)
criteria of evaluation, 145, 170 – 175
effect, 49, 56, 73, 131, 134, 154 – 155,
174
political and, 12 – 13, 21, 28, 53 – 54,
56 – 64, 68, 70 – 71, 79 – 80, 82, 121,
127 – 128, 154 – 155, 169 – 179
202 Index
Affect, 57, 63 – 66, 111 – 118, 130,
182 – 183n3. See also Vitality affect
categorical, 152, 186 – 187n4
vs. emotion, 152 – 154, 177,
186 – 187n4
politics of, 68, 173
Affective attunement, 111 – 115, 124,
126, 156
Affective tonality, 65 – 66, 112 – 113, 115,
124, 126, 142, 143, 152, 160 – 161,
168, 175, 186 – 187n4
Affi rmation, 84
Affordance, 45 – 46, 53, 66, 183n3
Agamben, Giorgio, 186n3
Aim, 16, 159, 179, 190n17, 191n19
Aliveness (animation), 43, 51, 58, 69,
107, 138 – 142, 145 – 149, 151 – 152,
174, 175, 178, 187n5. See also
Vitality affect
Allagmatic, 83
Amodal perception, 17 – 18, 74, 82,
109 – 113, 122 – 123, 125, 127, 141,
143, 145, 162, 170. See also
Nonsensuous perception
Analogy, 61, 63, 68, 70, 76, 78, 80, 83,
123
Analysis, 34 – 35
Animation, 81. See also Aliveness
Anticipation, 3, 12, 49, 95 – 97, 118
Appearance, pure, 51, 55, 148, 176,
178
Appetition, 151 – 152, 160, 169, 171,
191n19
Architecture, 52 – 53, 63, 99 – 103, 166
relational, 53, 80
Archive of experience, 105, 116,
122 – 123, 127, 132, 145, 186n2
Art, 59, 155. See also Aesthetic
abstract, 69 – 72, 137 – 138, 159 – 162
“ autonomy ” of, 47, 53 – 54, 58, 61, 71,
79, 143
decorative, 40 – 45 49, 69, 70, 71
digital, 81
expression and, 57, 63 – 64, 70,
178 – 179
fi gural, 133 – 135
fi gurative, 68 – 70, 185n6
installation, 72 – 73, 77
interactive, 39 – 40, 46, 52 – 54, 72 – 73,
77 – 81
life and, 45, 47, 54, 180
“ natural ” perception and, 45, 57 – 58
nature and, 25, 82
nonobject, 74, 159, 163
occurrent, 14, 28, 82 – 83, 168, 170 ( see
also Event, art as)
perception of perception and, 75
philosophy and, 13, 37, 83, 191n21
“ political, ” 53 – 54, 80 – 81, 174 – 175 ( see
also Aesthetic, political and)
potential and, 52 – 58, 62 – 63, 70,
73 – 75, 77, 80
pragmatism and, 37
radical empiricism and, 37
realist, 68, 130, 132
relational, 45, 73, 77, 79
representational, 128 – 135, 158
semblance and, 59 ( see also
Semblance, as aesthetic effect/force)
as speculative, 80, 83
statements, 172 – 175
as technique of existence, 45, 73 – 74,
75, 103, 128 – 129, 134, 138, 139,
141, 160 – 161, 166, 168 – 169
Artaud, Antonin, 135 – 137
Ashby, Arved, 145, 147, 153, 156
Audiovision/Audiovisual, 81 – 82,
143 – 144, 174
Aura, 44 – 45, 56, 134
Authenticity, 48, 177
Autonomy, relational, 53 – 54, 61,
63 – 64, 68, 79, 108 – 109, 116 – 117,
132, 143. See also Art, “ autonomy ” of
Autopoiesis, 182n3, 189n
Index 203
Bacon, Francis, 51, 190n18
Bare activity, 1 – 3, 5, 10 – 11, 22, 23, 27,
178 – 179, 181n1
Barthes, Roland, 57, 59, 153
Beauty. See Semblance, beautiful
Becoming, 2, 6, 9, 13, 25, 34, 36, 84,
100, 141. See also Ontogenesis
Being, extra-, 21, 133, 151
Being = feeling, 20, 26, 188 – 189n9,
190n16
Belief, lived, 33, 36 – 37, 184n3
Belonging, 4, 36, 90
Benjamin, Walter, 43, 135
on aura, 56, 134
on beautiful semblance, 60, 175 – 180
on critical violence, 178 – 180
on nonsensuous similarity, 105, 118
on produced resemblance, 123
on “ smallest ” totality, 59, 60, 179
Bennett, Jane, 181n1
Bergson, Henri, 31, 114
Biopower, 48
Body
as bare activity, 27
as continuous with the world, 28,
148, 165
potential and, 42 – 43, 116, 117,
140 – 141
as self-abstracting, 110, 124, 125,
140 – 141
Bourriau, Janine, 87
Bourriaud, Nicolas, 73
Bureau of Inverse Technology, 54
Capture, 48, 56 – 57, 68 – 70, 79 – 80
Cause, 11, 20, 60, 61, 62 – 64, 65,
109
vs. conditioning, 23, 147 – 149
quasi-, 191n19
Chance, 15, 103, 149, 182n3
Change, 1 – 2, 8 – 9, 12, 28, 107, 141,
160, 167, 169, 180, 181 – 182n3
experience/direct perception of, 4, 18,
27, 49 – 50, 88, 108 – 109, 115, 117,
125, 130, 176
Chaos
quasi-, 4, 5, 9, 11, 22, 103
of vision, 95, 97, 99
Chion, Michel, 81 – 82, 143
Cinema, 79, 81 – 82, 143, 144
Cognition, 50. See also Perceptual
feeling; Thinking-feeling
speculative pragmatism on, 32 – 34,
36 – 37
Cognitivism, 6 – 7, 10 – 11
Color, 70, 87 – 88, 95, 96, 102, 156, 160
Common sense, 27, 153 – 154, 172,
188n7
Communication, 64, 138, 153
Composition, 5, 12, 24 – 25, 73 – 74, 77,
109, 143 – 145, 146, 149, 155, 160,
169 – 170, 177
composing-away, 156 – 159, 162, 168,
169, 171, 175, 178, 179
composing-with, 158, 162, 164 – 165,
168, 175, 179
of the senses, 18, 23, 71, 80, 81,
144 – 145
Conatus, 64, 84
Concrescence, 16, 148 – 149, 150, 170,
171, 189 – 190n16
Concreteness, 27, 68 – 69, 72, 99, 100,
148, 181n1
Conditioning, 14, 15, 19 – 21, 22 – 24,
63, 70, 72, 79, 116, 124, 134 – 135,
147 – 149, 159, 175, 190n19
Conjunction/disjunction, 4 – 5, 8, 36,
95 – 96, 143 – 144, 150. See also
Continuity/discontinuity
Connectivity, 64, 66 – 67, 76, 81 – 82, 84,
85, 86. See also Nonlocal linkage
immanence of connection, 21 – 23,
34 – 35, 60 – 61, 64, 67, 185n4
Constraint, enabling, 77, 102, 149, 151
204 Index
Constructivism, 36, 53, 57, 100 – 102,
121, 127
Contemporary independence, 21, 64,
68, 183n3
Content, 27, 54, 57, 59 – 61, 65 – 66, 68,
92, 94, 106, 125, 130, 132 – 134, 169,
171, 173, 175 – 178, 186n2, 186n3,
186 – 187n4
emptying of, 137, 141, 144, 151, 154,
156 – 158, 168, 179 ( see also
Suspension)
eternal return of (paradox of),
150 – 157, 162, 168, 172, 174, 175,
177, 179
Continuity/discontinuity, 5, 32 – 36,
65 – 67, 84, 86, 88 – 91, 95 – 98,
106 – 107. See also Conjunction/
disjunction
Continuum
extensive, 128, 185n3
nature-culture, 148, 165 – 166,
190n16
of potential, 50, 53, 57 – 58, 88 – 89, 90,
98, 99 – 100, 101 – 102, 128
Contrast, 22 – 23, 70, 75 – 76, 89 – 90, 92,
93, 98, 137, 151, 182n3
Cosmopolitics, 172, 173
Counteractualization, 72
Counterpoint, 112 – 113, 114 – 115
Courchesne, Luc, 185n6
Creativity, 2 – 4, 8 – 9, 21, 27, 31, 49, 54,
64, 73 – 74, 121, 137, 149 – 150, 170
Cross-modal transfer, 55, 74 – 75, 110.
See also Amodal perception; Senses,
interrelation of
Cunningham, Merce, 138 – 139,
142 – 144, 154
Damasio, Antonio, 45, 184n2
Dance, 77 – 79, 105, 124 – 125, 138 – 145,
150 – 152, 154
Dean, Kenneth, 188n8
Deconstruction, 101 – 102
Defi niteness, 9 – 10, 27, 31 – 33, 89, 150
169
Degas, Edgar, 131 – 132
D é j à vu, 44, 166
Deleuze, Gilles
on abstract line, 17
on abstraction, 15, 27, 43
on anorganic life, 149
on belief in the world, 6, 183n3
on contemplation, 85, 183n4
on counteractualization, 72
on diagram, 14, 131 – 132, 141
on dramatization, 16, 184n1
on event, 182 – 183n3
on extra-being, 21, 133
on feeling = being, 188 – 189n9
on “ fourth-person singular, ” 133
on hallucination, 187n6
on “ a ” life, 51, 134
on lived abstraction, 15
on machinic phylum, 146
on the middle, 1
on monadology/nomadology, 59,
183n3
on nonhuman perception, 183n4
on nonlocal liaison (vinculum),
183n3
on non-philosophy, 191n21
on object, 6, 51, 184n1, 187n6
on powers of the false, 121, 187n6
on resonance, 63
on self-enjoyment, 181n2, 183n4
on simulacrum, 189n10
on singularity, 184n5
on subtraction, 77, 190n18
on surface, 133
on suspension, 47, 51, 66, 70
on time-image, 17
on the unlimited, 137
on virtual, 16, 67 – 68, 183 – 184n5
Whitehead and, 67 – 68, 183 – 184n4 – 5
Delusion, 118, 120 – 121
Democracy, bourgeois, 62
Index 205
Demonstrative, 30 – 31, 119 – 120, 172
Depth experience, 55 – 56, 72, 94, 96,
127 – 128, 132 – 134, 138, 165, 166,
176 – 177
Descartes, Ren é , 7
Determination, 9 – 10, 16, 89, 99 – 101,
131 – 132, 141, 165, 169
Diagram, 14 – 15, 25, 76, 89, 99 – 103,
131 – 132, 134, 140 – 141
Differential, 5, 17, 18, 19 – 21, 23,
30 – 31, 32, 73 – 74, 89, 112, 115, 129,
143 – 145, 148, 160 – 161, 163, 175,
179, 182n3
Digital technology, 67, 77 – 78, 81 – 82,
174
Disinterestedness, 47, 51
Disposition, 50, 52 – 53, 59, 76
Dissipation, 139 – 140, 141, 161
Doubt, 7, 32
Dove, Toni, 79
Dramatization, 16 – 17
Drawing, 131 – 137
Duration, 9, 24, 182n13
Ecology, 28, 69, 155, 191n21
of experience, 76
political 62, 174
Edge, 87 – 93, 96 – 99
Effect, 3, 17 – 20, 21, 33, 147 – 149,
189n10
aesthetic, 49, 69 – 72, 77, 81 – 82,
143 – 145, 159 – 161, 163, 164 – 165,
174
extra-, 20 – 21, 144
pure, 189n19
really-next-, 32 – 35, 36 – 37
Eisenman, Peter, 101, 102
Emotion, 138, 152 – 154, 177,
186 – 187n4
Energy, 5 – 6, 16. See also Activation
(energizing)
abstract (pure), 139 – 141, 159 – 162
perceptual, 70, 145, 159 – 162, 168
Ethos, 63
Event, 1 – 6, 26, 85, 178
absoluteness of, 20 – 21
affective tonality and, 152, 161 – 162
art as, 72 – 73, 80, 82 – 83, 128, 130,
137, 140, 154 – 155, 158 – 159, 163,
165
as creative, 150
Deleuze on, 182 – 183n3
dynamic unity of, 3 – 4, 10, 17 – 20, 21,
115, 149, 179, 182n3
expressive, 144 – 145, 146 – 148, 155
175, 179
implicate order and, 35
local signs of, 128, 134, 148, 151, 154,
161
media as, 82 – 83, 102, 143, 145
nonlocality of, 23, 107, 144
nonsensuous perception and,
108 – 109, 116, 122 – 124, 130, 148
object and, 5 – 9, 30 – 31, 43, 51,
107 – 108, 187n4
semblance of, 17, 19, 122, 125 – 126,
156
as singular-generic, 112 – 113, 153,
187n4
subject and, 6 – 9, 14, 21, 30 – 31,
159
as uncaused, 149
virtual and, 17 – 18, 24, 44, 65, 89 – 90,
95 – 96, 122 – 123, 124, 125 – 126,
127 – 128, 137 – 138, 170, 173 – 174
Whitehead on, 6, 119, 182 – 183n3
yoking of, 108, 110 – 111, 115, 116,
125, 127
Event-nexus, 165
Event-value, 53 – 54, 56
Excess (remainder), 18, 20, 56, 94, 130,
134, 141, 144, 151, 155, 156, 157,
161
Exemplifi cation, 51, 108, 162
Existence, 27. See also Technique of
existence
206 Index
double, 106 – 108, 120, 133, 150, 167,
170
powers of, 12 – 13, 18, 28, 98, 171
Experience
as amodal, 74, 110
archive of, 105, 116, 122 – 123, 127,
132, 145, 186n2
of change, 4
double ordering of, 115 – 118, 121,
129, 133, 144, 148, 150 – 151, 161,
169 – 170 ( see also Process, qualitative-
relational duplicity of)
in drops, 5, 51 – 52
ecology of, 76
moreness of, 3, 44 – 46, 58, 113, 133,
182
nonverbal, 123 – 124, 127, 187 – 188n7
poles/limits of, 45, 53, 73 – 76, 85 – 86,
94, 148, 150 – 151, 178
primary phase of, 2 – 3, 114
pure, 10 – 11, 29, 33, 75, 141, 144
quality of, 58, 65 – 66, 75, 82, 159
“ raw, ” 10 – 11
of relation, 4, 34 – 35
as self-relating, 4, 7, 33 – 34, 161 – 162
as transition, 32
world made of, 25, 31, 85, 188 – 189n9
Expression, 10, 14, 20 – 22. See also
Event, expressive; Force, of
expression
art and, 57, 63 – 64, 70, 178 – 179
impersonality of, 138, 141, 162
pure, 138, 141, 144 – 145, 151, 155,
168, 170, 179
semblance and, 23 – 24, 46, 141
world made of, 21, 25
Expressionism, abstract, 159
Expressionless, 179 – 180
Extra-being, 21, 133, 151
Fact, 1, 5, 24, 51, 57, 119, 150
Feedback of higher forms, 11
Feeling. See also Perceptual feeling;
Thinking-feeling
= being, 20, 25 – 26, 188 – 189n9,
190n16
continuum of, 88
intensity of, 159, 171, 190n17
lure for, 151
personal, 177
pure, 10, 85
unfelt, 184n5
Fiction, 66 – 67
Field
of emergence, 22 – 23, 76, 103
problematic, 155 – 156
relational, 20, 22 – 24, 36, 142 – 145,
155, 160 – 163, 189n13
Figural, 91 – 96, 98 – 99, 133 – 135,
138 – 139, 152, 160
Firstness, 11, 89, 92, 98
Folding, 16, 34 – 35, 59, 88, 95, 140,
145
Force
abstract, 56 – 57, 141
of expression (aesthetic force),
132 – 133, 134, 141 – 142, 144, 145,
154 – 157, 158, 171, 174 – 175, 179
formative, 5, 12, 16
Form, 40 – 42, 45, 92, 94 – 95, 99, 113.
See also Subjective form
dynamic, 15, 24, 27, 40, 45 – 46, 54,
83, 118, 132, 144, 159
of inclusion, 58
of transition, 140
Formalism, 169
Form-of-life, 18, 45, 48, 54, 73,
110 – 114, 116, 131 – 132, 133, 134,
169 – 171, 186n3
Forsythe, William, 140, 143, 189n13,
191n20
Foucault, Michel, 26, 47 – 48
Framing, 47, 49, 52, 55 – 57, 58, 60,
61 – 62, 72, 74, 79, 86, 128, 129 – 130,
159, 163
Existence (cont.)
Index 207
Freedom, 53, 64, 69, 117, 146. See also
Contemporary independence
Fusion, 21 – 23, 28, 50, 74 – 76, 81 – 82,
95, 143 – 144, 146 – 147, 150, 159 – 165,
166, 174, 190n16. See also Nonlocal
linkage
Future, immediate, 9, 17, 18
Gaming, 40, 46 – 47, 77, 184n1
Generality, 50, 83, 92, 99, 153 – 154,
172, 176 – 177, 183n5
Generic. See Singular-generic
Genosko, Gary, 103
Gesture, 119, 124, 134, 139 – 141,
176
Gibson, James J., 45, 93 – 94, 95, 96
Gift, 34 – 35
Gil, Jos é , 138, 139, 140, 142, 143, 150,
189n12
Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von, 87
Graham, Martha, 138 – 139, 177
Guattari, F é lix
on abstract line, 17
on anorganic life, 149
on event, 182n3
on feeling = being, 183n4, 188n9
on machinic phylum, 146
on meta-modelization, 103, 186n2
on middle, 1
on nonhuman perception, 183n4
on non-philosophy, 191n21
on nucleus of expression, 189n13
on process, 66
on resonance, 63
on self-enjoyment, 181n2
on simulacrum, 189n10
on subtraction, 77, 190n18
on transmonadism, 59, 68 – 69, 182n3
on universe of value, 186n2
Habit, 95 – 97, 103
Hallucination, 106, 126, 187n6
Haptic, 55, 57, 71, 75
Harmony, 60 – 61, 69, 71, 176 – 178
Hearing, 81, 82, 95, 111, 113, 125
vision and, 18, 143, 145, 156, 157,
167
Hegel, W.F.H., 58
Heterogenesis, 182n3
Human, 26, 131, 138, 148, 152 – 153,
165, 174, 176
Identity, 31 – 32, 58 – 59, 96 – 98, 100,
108 – 109, 112, 133, 177, 179
Illusion, 7, 16, 32, 36, 41, 55, 57, 60,
67, 127, 130
Imagination, 50, 120 – 122, 126, 173
Imitation, 105, 112, 127, 131
Immanence, 27, 49, 58, 70, 83, 84,
144, 146, 160, 171
becoming-immanent, 142 – 144, 155,
157, 158 – 159, 161 – 162, 165 – 166,
175
of connection/relation, 21 – 23, 60 – 67,
76, 80, 82, 85, 185n4
paradox of, 22
Immediacy, 1 – 5, 11, 17, 19, 28, 33, 42,
44, 58, 66, 74, 76, 82, 86, 89, 113,
121, 125, 154, 160, 162, 179,
190n16. See also Abstraction, lived;
Perception, direct
Immediation, 73, 166 – 167
Imperceptibility, 43, 45, 65, 89, 93, 94,
164 – 165
Impersonality, 131, 133 – 134, 141,
145 – 146, 162
Importance, 14, 26
Inclusion
ex-, 155
form of, 58 – 59, 162
mutual, 4, 9, 24, 59, 85, 113, 115,
124, 143 – 144, 145, 153, 169 – 170,
174, 182n3,
Individual, bourgeois, 56, 62, 68
Individuality, 20, 22, 64, 150, 182n3.
See also Self, emergent
208 Index
Individuation, 83, 115, 187n5
trans-, 113 – 114
Infl ection, 16, 149
Institution, 52 – 53
Intensity, 20, 45, 47, 71, 75, 84, 88,
102, 116 – 118, 131, 138, 145 – 146,
151 – 154, 157, 158 – 159, 166 – 169,
171, 175, 178 – 179, 189n10, 190n17
Interactivity, 39 – 40, 45 – 49, 52, 66 – 67,
79 – 80, 82, 149. See also Art,
interactive
as regime of power, 47 – 49
relationality vs., 21, 46, 64, 72 – 76, 82,
85 – 86, 113, 149
Whitehead on, 67, 190n16
Interpetation, 153, 177
Invention, 14, 18, 27, 53, 54, 57,
73 – 74, 121, 122 – 123, 125 – 126, 170,
185n4
Irwin, Robert, 71 – 73, 74, 75, 77,
158 – 169, 177
James, William
on activity, 1
on bare activity, 1, 178 – 179, 181n1
on belief, 33
on change, 1, 4
on cognition, 7, 9, 32
on conjunction/disjunction, 4 – 5, 36
on drops of experience, 51, 52
on line, 91, 97
on little absolute, 20, 58 – 59, 179,
182n3
on local signs, 128
on object, 6 – 7, 9, 29 – 31, 33 – 34
on pragmatism, 29 – 30, 37
on pure experience, 10, 33, 75
on quasi-chaos, 4, 103
on radical empiricism, 4, 29 – 30, 34,
37, 85 – 86
on really-next-effects, 33
on reenaction, 114
on relation, 34, 85 – 86, 91
on skipped intermediaries, 116 – 117
on specious present, 9
on speculation, 37, 86
on subject, 6 – 7, 9, 29 – 31, 33
on terminus, 4, 16, 29, 31, 32, 118
on transition, 30 – 32, 33 – 34
on truth, 29, 32, 118 – 119
on virtual, 23, 33, 86, 117, 118,
119
Jeremijenko, Natalie, 54
Judgment, 11, 98 – 100, 171, 175
Kinesthesia, 42, 44, 55, 71, 74, 75, 76,
77, 79 – 80, 97, 125, 137, 138, 145,
156, 162, 165, 185n7
Klee, Paul, 24 – 25
Lacan, Jacques, 16
Lamb, Trevor, 87
Langer, Susanne, 41, 125, 130
on occurrent arts, 82 – 83
on semblance, 43, 57, 127 – 128,
141 – 142
Language
as archive of experience, 105, 116,
122, 127
demonstrative, 30, 119 – 120
and eternal return of content,
152 – 154, 156, 174 – 175
as gesture, 124
movement and, 117 – 119
narrative, 66, 152
nonlocal linkage and, 116 – 118,
122 – 123, 124
nonsensuous similarity and, 105,
116 – 117, 122, 127
performative, 66, 124, 173 – 174
phatic, 66
politicality and, 173 – 174
potential and, 122
power of the false and, 121, 187n6
pure experience and, 10 – 11
semblance and, 66, 105, 122
Index 209
as speculative, 119, 121
as technique of existence, 123, 153,
173
terminus and, 118 – 119
thought and, 117 – 121, 122, 124, 187n
6, 187 – 188n7
truth and, 119 – 120, 173, 187n6
Lapoujade, David, 184
Law, 14, 103
Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm, 58, 183n3
Lenin, Vladimir, 171
Life. See also Abstraction, lived;
Aliveness; Animation; Form-of-life;
Vitality affect
“ a, ” 51, 57, 134
abstraction and, 28, 43
as activity, 1
anorganic, 149
art and, 45, 47, 54, 180
-design, 52, 77
intensity of, 84, 118, 153, 178 – 179
lived-in, 45, 58, 72 – 74, 85 – 86
matter and, 15, 25, 27 – 28, 181n1,
183n4
moreness of, 44 – 45, 46, 49
-motif, 50
nature and, 27 – 28, 82
semblance and, 26, 46, 50, 56 – 57,
69 – 70, 134, 141, 146, 175 – 180
-style, 50
unlimited, 141, 179
Likeness, 44 – 45, 49, 50 – 51, 56, 58, 72,
83, 90, 127, 134, 152, 156, 184n2,
187n4. See also Nonsensuous
similarity; Resemblance
Limit. See also Experience, poles/limits
of
de-limiting, 134, 137, 142, 156 – 157,
166
of expression, 151
immanent, 75 – 76, 82, 94, 164
un-limiting, 60, 102, 137 – 141, 166,
179
virtual, 17, 89 – 90, 122
Limitation, 88, 92, 96 – 98, 101
Line, 137, 160 – 161. See also Edge;
World-line
abstract, 17, 24, 134
virtual, 88 – 91, 92, 99, 125
Literature, 70, 121
Local sign, 128, 134, 145, 148, 151,
152, 154, 161
Lozano-Hemmer, Rafael, 53, 80
Machinic phylum, 146 – 147
Magic, 126, 134 – 137, 173
Mahler, Gustav, 156 – 157, 167 – 169
Manning, Erin, 27, 28, 53, 77, 133,
134, 140, 149, 185n7, 188n7,
189n13, 191n20
Manovich, Lev, 81, 103
Marks, Laura U., 72
Marx, Karl, 56, 62
Matter
body and, 27
life and, 15, 25, 27 – 28, 181n1, 183n4
Media
as event, 82 – 83, 102, 143, 145
digital, 77 – 78, 81 – 82, 174
meta-, 81 – 82, 103
multi-, 158
Mediation, 82, 91 – 92, 99, 166, 186n4,
187, 190n16. See also Immediation
Message, 153, 156, 174
Meta-modelization, 103, 186n2
Metaphor, 138 – 139, 140, 145, 151,
152, 153, 155, 173, 177, 178 – 179
Michotte, Albert, 106 – 109, 124
Migayrou, Fr é d é ric, 101
Mirror neurons, 114
Mixing, 82
Model, 99 – 100, 103, 123, 134, 173
meta-, 103, 186n2
Modulation, 15, 149, 152, 160, 168
Monadism, 58, 59, 64, 66, 72, 76
trans-, 59, 68 – 69, 182n3
210 Index
Monarchy, absolute, 56, 60 – 63
Montanaro, Michael, 77 – 78
Mood, 65
Motif
decorative, 40 – 41, 43 – 44, 58, 59, 69
life, 50
Movement, 30 – 31, 33, 41, 43, 111 – 112,
114, 115, 125, 129, 162. See also
Kinesthesia; Proprioception
abstract, 70, 162
becoming-immanent of, 165
extensive, 162, 165, 181n1
language and, 117 – 119
music and, 145, 156
nonsensuous similarity and, 106 – 108
pure, 138 – 142, 151, 158
semblance and, 78
of thought, 121
unlimited, 139
virtual, 41, 43, 59 – 60, 61, 114, 170
vision and, 17, 41 – 43, 59 – 60, 69,
70 – 71, 77 – 80, 95 – 97, 106 – 109, 114,
127, 137, 156, 160, 162, 164 – 165,
185n6
Multiplicity, 4, 8, 22, 35, 91, 158,
190n18. See also One-many
Murphie, Andrew, 103, 189n15
Music, 110
absolute, 145, 147, 152, 156 – 157, 168
dance and, 142 – 144, 150, 154
Narrative, 66, 67, 73, 76, 79, 152 – 153
Nature
abstraction and, 28, 43
art and, 25, 26 – 27, 82
life and, 27 – 28, 82
as process, 6
Nature-culture continuum, 148,
165 – 166, 189n10, 190n16
Nature philosophy, 28
Negative prehension, 155, 183 – 184n5
New media, 40, 47, 55, 67, 81
Newton, Isaac, 87
Nexus, 165 – 166, 174
No ë , Alva, 43
Nomadology, 59
Nonconscious, 64, 75, 85, 109 – 110,
114, 115, 125, 143, 165, 167, 186n4
Noncontradiction, 19
Nonhuman, 25 – 27, 165, 183n4,
189n13
Nonlocality, 23 – 24, 27, 161, 162, 163.
See also Nonlocal linkage
Nonlocal linkage, 106 – 109, 111, 134,
144, 149, 170, 187n4, 1879n10. See
also Fusion
dance and, 140 – 142, 150
language and, 116 – 118, 122 – 123, 124
local sign of, 128, 161
music and, 145 – 146
ritual and, 124
rhythm as, 125
Nonobject, 6, 74, 130, 159, 160, 163
Nonsensuous perception, 17 – 18, 23 – 24,
65 – 66, 73, 76, 85, 107, 109 – 110, 114,
130, 141, 150, 159, 183n3, 187n4,
187n5, 187n7, 190n19. See also
Amodal perception
language and, 116 – 117
politics and, 169 – 170
Nonsensuous similarity, 105 – 106,
108 – 109, 110, 123 – 124, 127, 144,
151, 156, 169, 186n1, 186n2, 187n7,
190n16. See also Likeness
dance and, 142, 151
proprioception and, 125
imagination and, 120 – 121
language and, 105, 116 – 117, 122,
127
painting and, 127 – 129, 131 – 133
ritual and, 124 – 126
semblance as, 146
truth and, 118, 176
Novelty, 1 – 2, 5, 18, 21, 22, 27, 150,
171, 182n3, 186n1, 190n16,
190n17
Index 211
Object. See also Nonobject
as abstraction, 6, 16, 27, 41 – 43, 74,
117, 185n3
affect and, 66, 69, 132
breaking open of, 52
choreographic, 189n13
commodity, 56
Deleuze on, 6, 51, 184n1, 187n6
diagram and, 16, 99
emergence of, 35, 96 – 97, 101, 111,
113 – 115
eternal, 184n5
as event, 5 – 9, 30 – 31, 43, 51, 107 – 108,
187n4
James on, 6 – 7, 9, 29 – 31, 33 – 34
language and, 118, 120
movement and, 106 – 109, 139, 150
perception, 41 – 45, 49 – 50, 55, 57, 70,
76, 114 – 116, 117, 184n2
potential and, 8 – 9, 15, 42, 51, 73, 97,
116
of power, 48
pure experience and, 10, 85
reality and, 6, 130
semblance and, 27, 43 – 44, 51, 56, 58,
71, 146, 163 – 164, 187n4
technical, 46, 53, 185n4
as trace, 110, 115, 117
subject and, 7 – 11, 14, 29 – 34, 36, 140
Whitehead on, 6, 8, 9, 15, 16, 43,
117
Occurrent arts, 14, 28, 82 – 83, 168, 170.
See also Event, art as
Ocularcentrism, 55, 62, 75
One-many, 5, 23, 24, 31, 33, 35, 142,
150
Ontogenesis, 13, 14, 84, 110, 115,
169 – 170, 198n10. See also Becoming
Opinion, 51, 154, 172, 188n7
Opposition, 12, 34, 92, 98
Order. See also Experience, double
ordering of
emergence of, 97
implicate, 35 – 36
semblance of, 59 – 62, 68 – 70, 129
Painting
abstract, 69, 72, 159 – 162, 168
color fi eld, 70 – 71
fi gurative, 40, 68, 158
landscape, 63, 128
perspective, 55 – 63, 68, 71, 127 – 130,
183 – 184n3
Panofsky, Erwin, 184 – 185n3
Paradox
activist philosophy and, 18 – 19
of change, 181 – 182n3
of content, 142
of the dancing body, 150
of immanence, 22
of relation, 19 – 21
of self-enjoyment, 2
of semblance, 23, 105
of the virtual, 18 – 19, 23
Participation, 3 – 5, 9, 22 – 23, 30 – 32,
36 – 37
Past, immediate, 9, 17, 24, 65
Peirce, C.S.
on abstraction, 15, 99
on being = feeling, 188 – 189n9
on continuum of feeling, 88
on diagram, 14 – 15, 89, 99, 100
on law as habit, 103
on ovum of the universe, 90
on perceptual judgment, 11
on Secondness, 89, 98
Perception. See also Amodal perception;
Nonsensuous perception
as action, 43, 76
of change, 4, 18, 27, 49 – 50, 88,
108 – 109, 115, 117, 125, 130, 176
as creative event, 27, 82 – 83
of depth, 55 – 57, 72, 94, 96, 127 – 128,
176
direct (immediate), 11, 17, 42, 43, 50,
74, 82, 86, 105, 107, 109 – 110, 115,
212 Index
117, 141, 156 ( see also Perceptual
feeling; Perceptual judgment;
Thinking-feeling)
double, 41, 42 – 44, 47, 49, 56, 66,
70 – 73, 78, 93, 97, 106, 125, 161
embodied, 43
of form, 40, 93
of movement, 41, 43 – 44, 68, 69,
106 – 109, 114 ( see also Vision,
movement and)
“ natural, ” 42, 44 – 45, 55, 57 – 58
nonhuman, 25 – 27, 183n4
object, 41 – 45, 49 – 50, 55, 57, 70, 76,
114 – 116, 117, 184n2
radical empiricism on, 85
semblance and, 44, 47, 49, 51, 56
as taking account, 25 – 27
threshold of, 164
unterminated, 32 – 33, 86, 117 – 119, 121
virtual and, 43, 44, 55, 65, 86, 121
of volume, 42
Whitehead on, 25 – 26, 183n3
Perception of perception, 44, 45, 47,
70 – 72, 75, 161 – 166, 168 – 169
Perceptual feeling (felt perception),
17 – 18, 23 – 24, 105 – 110, 112, 118,
125 – 126, 128 – 129, 130, 132, 133,
134, 141 – 145, 156, 160 – 161, 164,
179, 188n9
Perceptual judgment, 11
Performance, 30, 79, 85, 124, 125, 127,
140 – 142, 146, 147, 156, 173
Performance envelope, 74, 77, 80, 142,
152
Performative language, 66, 124,
173 – 174
Perishing, 9, 13, 17, 22, 26, 57, 84
Personal, 56, 131 – 134, 138, 140, 142,
152, 154, 177
Perspective, 55 – 63, 68, 71, 127 – 130,
183 – 184n3
Philosophy. See also Activist
philosophy; Radical empiricism
art and, 13, 37, 83, 191n21
as critique of pure feeling, 10, 85
cognitive, 6 – 8
nonobject, 6
non-philosophy and, 191n21
paradox and, 18 – 19
process, 2 – 3, 4
speculative, 121 ( see also Speculative
pragmatism)
Photography, 56 – 57, 58, 59, 185n6
Plotinus, 183n4
Politicality, 13 – 14, 155, 167
a-, 172 – 173, 178
criteria of, 170 – 174, 178
Politics
affective, 68
art and, 12 – 13, 21, 28, 53 – 54, 56 – 64,
68, 70 – 71, 79 – 80, 82, 121, 127 – 128,
154 – 155, 169 – 179
cosmo-, 172, 173
metaphysics and, 178 – 179
of nature, 28
of potential, 13 – 14, 169
Portraiture, 56, 59, 131 – 132, 134 –
135
Position, 50, 53, 107, 160
Potential, 1 – 2, 5
art and, 52 – 58, 62 – 63, 70, 73 – 75, 77,
80
body and, 42 – 43, 116, 117, 140 – 141
capture of, 57
continuum of, 50, 53, 57 – 58, 88 – 89,
90, 98, 99 – 100, 101 – 102, 128
expression of, 57
fi eld of, 23
givenness of, 8 – 9, 10, 15, 22
language and, 122
lived-in, 58
object and, 8 – 9, 15, 42, 51 73, 97,
116
Perception (cont.)
Index 213
perception of, 94, 97 ( see also
Likeness; Semblance)
politics of, 13 – 14, 169
pure, 10, 15 – 16, 43, 67 – 68, 183, 184
real, 67, 183 – 184n5
residual, 56 – 57 ( see also Excess
[remainder])
semblance and, 43 – 44, 49, 51, 55, 56,
58
suspension of, 43 – 44, 51, 53, 57
thought and, 50 – 51
unactualized, 28
virtual and, 16, 33, 67 – 68
Whitehead on, 1, 16, 28, 67 – 68
Power, 58. See also Semblance, regimes
of power and
bio-, 48
interactivity and, 47 – 49
virtual, 141, 173, 188n7
Powers of existence, 12 – 13, 18, 28, 98,
171
Powers of the false, 121 – 123, 126, 128,
131, 138, 142, 173, 187n6
Pragmatism, 29 – 37. See also Speculative
pragmatism
radical empiricism and, 29, 36 – 37
theory of truth and, 29 – 30, 32 – 33, 36,
118 – 119, 120 – 121, 126, 127, 130,
138 140, 188n8
Prehension, 85, 186n1
negative, 155, 183 – 184n5
Present, specious, 9, 17
Prestige-value, 56
Process, 1 – 6
affi rmation and, 84
becoming and, 13
criteria of judgment of, 171 – 172,
175
Deleuze/Guattari on, 66
denial of, 172
duration and, 24
limit of, 16 – 17, 151
nature as, 6
phases of, 9, 182
politicality of, 13 – 14, 169, 171, 175
qualitative-relational duplicity of, 3 – 5,
8, 12, 13, 15, 148, 107 – 108 ( see also
Existence, double; Experience, double
ordering of; Perception, double)
remaindering of, 151, 155, 161 ( see
also Excess [remainder])
as speculative, 12
virtual and, 16 – 17
Proprioception, 95 – 97, 112, 124 – 125,
127, 137, 146, 156, 162, 166
amodality of, 125 – 126
thought and, 138, 145
Proust, Marcel, 24
Punctum, 57, 59
Pure, defi ned, 10. See also, Appearance,
pure; Effect, pure; Energy, abstract
(pure); Experience, pure; Expression,
pure; Movement, pure; Potential,
pure; Thought, pure
Qualitative-relational. See also
Experience, double ordering of;
Process, qualitative-relational
duplicity of
Quasi-cause, 191n19
Quasi-chaos, 4, 5, 9, 11, 22, 103
Radical empiricism
activist philosopy and, 4
art and, 37
conjunction/disjunction (continuity/
discontinuity) and, 4, 36
meta-modeling and, 104
pragmatism and, 29, 36 – 37
on relation, 34, 85 – 86, 179
speculative pragmatism and, 85 – 86,
179
on subject-object, 29 – 30
Ranci è re, Jacques, 170
214 Index
Real
abstract and, 41
actual and, 16
intensive, 189n10
objects and, 6, 130
radical empiricism on, 4, 34, 85 – 86
relation as, 34, 85 – 86
as self-supporting, 32
virtual and, 16 – 17
Whitehead ’ s defi nition of, 67,
183 – 184n5
Realism
in art, 68, 130, 132
effective, 8, 24, 36
political, 172
Recognition, 50, 73, 108 – 109, 110 – 111,
113 – 114
Reenaction, 114 – 115, 122, 125, 156
Refl ection, 4, 6, 50, 64, 129, 130,
129 – 130, 149, 162
self-, 2, 19, 44
Relation, 3. See also Autonomy,
relational; Process, qualitative-
relational duplicity of; Technique of
relation
activity of, 89 – 93, 97, 102, 104
art and, 45, 73, 77, 79
being of, 20
conjunctive/disjunctive, 4 – 5, 8, 36
experienced (felt, perceived), 4, 34 – 35,
74, 79, 86, 97 – 98, 107, 116, 117,
125, 187n5
fi eld of, 20, 22 – 24, 36, 142 – 145, 155,
160 – 163, 165, 189n13
and form-of-life, 111 – 113
immanence of, 22, 64, 66 – 67, 70 – 71,
76, 82, 85, 162, 165, 185n4
immediacy of, 58, 73, 179
vs. interaction, 21, 46, 64, 72 – 76, 82,
85 – 86, 113, 149
invoked, 126, 134 – 135, 173
lived, 15, 42 – 43, 45, 46, 52, 73, 85
nonlocality of, 23, 35
paradox of, 19 – 21
primacy of, 34
quality of, 146 – 147
radical empiricism on, 34, 85 – 86, 179
reality of, 34, 84 – 85
self-, 4, 7, 33 – 34, 125, 140, 161 – 162
semblance and, 46, 105
technique of, 53, 103
as virtual, 36, 43, 64, 84, 86, 185n3
Relational architecture, 53, 80
Relation-of-nonrelation, 20 – 23, 25,
61 – 62, 76, 79, 80, 84, 143, 144, 161,
179
Relativity, 92
Representation, 27, 51, 118, 128 – 135,
137, 138, 158, 172
Resemblance, 105, 107 – 108, 112, 123,
127, 134, 176 – 177, 178. See also
Likeness; Nonsensuous similarity
produced, 123, 128 – 129
self-, 108, 132 – 133
Resonance, 21, 63, 72, 73, 76, 81, 82,
83, 122, 123 – 124, 152 – 153, 183n3
Rhythm, 78, 107 – 108, 109, 115, 125,
142, 145, 156, 165 – 66
Riegl, Alois, 57
Ritual, 123 – 127, 128, 134 – 135, 189n8
Romanticism, 83 – 84
Ruyer, Raymond, 186n2, 187n4
Ryle, Gilbert, 65
Sculpture, 71 – 72
Secondness, 89 – 90, 92, 93, 98
Self, emergent, 110 – 114, 187n5
Self-enjoyment, 2 – 4, 8, 14, 17, 19, 20,
28, 181n2
Self-referentiality, 44, 70 – 71, 84 – 85,
125, 162, 168, 170
Self-refl ection, 2, 19, 44
Semblance, 15 – 24. See also Abstraction,
lived; Likeness; Nonsensuous
perception; Nonsensuous similiarity
as abstract force, 56
Index 215
of action, 47
as aesthetic effect/force, 49, 56, 73,
131, 134, 154 – 155, 174, 179
beautiful, 60, 175 – 180
commodity fetishism and, 56
composition (construction) of, 24 – 25,
127
of content, 176, 178
of depth, 55 – 56, 72, 127, 132
diagram and, 132
of event, 17, 19, 122, 125 – 126, 156
expression and, 23 – 24, 46, 141
vs. illusion, 16, 41, 55, 56, 57, 60, 127
immanence and, 58
of inhabitation, 63, 72
language and, 66, 105, 122
of life, 26, 50, 56, 69 – 70, 141, 146, 175
life (aliveness) and, 26, 46, 56 – 57,
69 – 70, 134, 141, 175 – 180
as little absolute, 58, 178
as lived abstraction, 43 – 44
of meaning, 139 – 141
as monadic, 58 – 59
movement and, 78
nonsensuous similarity and, 122, 146
of not being a semblance, 130 – 131,
133
object and, 27, 43 – 44, 49 – 51, 56, 58,
71, 146, 163 – 164, 187n4
of order, 59 – 62, 68 – 70, 129
paradox of, 23, 105
of a person, 134, 152
poles/limits of, 178
politicality and, 54, 174, 175
potential and, 43, 49, 51, 55, 56, 58
regimes of power and, 60, 61, 62, 63
relation and, 46, 105
relational art and, 73
representation as, 128
of self-expression, 141
simulacrum and, 189
of a situation, 52, 78 – 79
as “ smallest totality, ” 59, 179
space and, 57, 58, 60, 61, 63, 68, 72,
78 – 79, 125 – 126, 127 – 128, 163 – 164,
176
of surface, 72 – 73
as surface effect, 72, 133 – 134
symbolic, 177
time and, 24 – 25
technique of existence and, 142 – 143
of a truth, 126 – 130, 137 – 138, 166 – 167
of “ the ” truth, 130, 133, 175 – 176,
178, 179
virtual and, 15 – 18, 55, 56
vision and, 17 – 18, 23 – 24, 43 – 44,
49 – 51, 55 – 56, 70 – 71, 127, 137, 161,
164
visionary, 126
of volume, 42, 46
of a whole, 132
of a world, 24, 58, 60, 85
Senses
composition of, 18, 23, 71, 80, 81,
144 – 145
“ distribution ” of, 170
interrelation of, 23, 55, 57, 72, 74 – 75,
81, 88, 95, 110, 129, 148, 156, 157
( see also Synchresis)
as technologies/techniques of
existence, 27, 144 – 145, 147, 149
virtual and, 18, 71, 76
“ withness of, ” 189n14
Sha Xin Wei, 77, 80
Sign. See Local sign
Similarity. See Likeness; Nonsensuous
similiarity; Resemblance
Simondon, Gilbert
on allagmatics, 83
on being of relation, 20
on disparateness, 21
on ontogenesis, 13
on technical object, 53
on transduction, 64, 78
on transindividuation, 113
on virtual, 185n4
216 Index
Simulacrum, 189n10
Singular-generic, 50, 51, 57, 76, 83,
112, 142, 144, 145, 146, 152, 153,
175, 187n4
Singularity, 3, 13, 20, 71, 82, 92, 112,
150, 166, 173, 175, 177, 184n5
Site-specifi c, 50, 52, 76
Situation, 52 – 54, 65, 73
Situationists, 54
Skipped intermediaries, 116 – 121
Smoak, Harry, 77, 78
Sociality, 35
Sovereignty, 62, 68, 71
Space. See also Nonlocality; Semblance,
space and
cosmological, 125 – 126
dance and, 141
emergence of, 90, 92, 94 – 97, 102,
162 – 164
extensive, 69, 147, 181n1
music and, 145 – 146
virtual and, 16, 116, 128, 134 ( see also
Semblance, space and)
Speculation, 11, 12, 37, 80, 83, 86,
119 – 121, 126, 138, 139 – 140, 141,
149, 159, 168 – 169
Speculative pragmatism, 12 – 14, 28, 37,
85, 86, 104, 145, 149 – 150, 167, 169,
170, 179. See aslo Activist
philosophy; Truth, speculative-
pragmatist theory of
diagram and, 25
meta-modeling and, 103
political criteria and, 171, 174, 175
radical empiricism and, 85, 179
virtual and, 16, 18, 36 – 37
Spinoza, Baruch, 64, 84
Spontaneity, 24, 103, 109, 111,
113 – 114, 125, 132, 133, 140, 141,
147 – 148, 149, 159
Standard, 98 – 100, 103, 177
non-, 101 – 102
State, 62
Stengers, Isabelle, 172
Stern, Daniel, 43, 107, 108, 109,
110 – 112, 187n4
Style, 50, 51, 73, 134
Subject. See also, Self, emergent;
Subjective form
event and, 6 – 9, 14, 21, 30 – 31, 159
James on, 6 – 7, 9, 29 – 31, 33
“ legislating, ” 62
object and, 7 – 11, 14, 29 – 34, 36, 140
pure experience and, 10
semblance and, 51
Whitehead on, 8, 159
Subjective form, 8, 10, 14, 15, 21, 159,
165, 181n2, 183n4, 183 – 185n4
Subtraction, 77, 166, 190n18. See also
Composition, composing-away
Suggestion, 126, 134 – 135, 167
Superject, 9, 21
Surprise, 16
Suspension, 35, 43 – 44, 47, 51 – 52, 53,
55, 57, 66, 71, 73, 120, 140,
158 – 159, 161 – 162, 171, 178, 180.
See also Composition,
composing-away
Symbol, 11, 138, 139, 140, 145, 151,
152, 153, 155, 173, 176 – 177,
178 – 179
Synchresis, 21, 143 – 144, 147, 148, 150,
170, 171. See also Fusion
Synesthesia. See Senses, interrelation of
Technique of existence, 14, 15, 25, 85,
185
art and, 45, 73 – 74, 75, 103, 128 – 129,
134, 138, 139, 141, 160 – 161, 166,
168 – 169
body as, 26 – 27
as conditioning, 148 – 149,
190 – 191n19
diagram and, 100 – 101, 131 – 132, 134
differential and, 144
expression and, 151, 152, 157, 165
Index 217
language as, 123, 153, 173
philosophy as, 191n21
political and, 169 – 172
as recomposing the senses, 18
ritual as, 123 – 124, 134
semblance as, 142 – 143
senses as, 27, 144 – 145, 147, 149
technology and, 146 – 147, 167
Technique of relation, 53, 103
Technology, 146 – 147, 167
digital, 67, 77 – 78, 81 – 82, 174
Technology of lived abstraction, 15
Tendency, 4, 32, 35, 54, 80, 84 – 85, 86,
119, 122, 160, 185n4, 190n19
Terminus, 4, 9, 16, 29, 31 – 34, 37, 86,
116 – 121, 126, 139 – 140, 141, 151,
169, 190n19
Thinking-feeling, 11, 49 – 50, 65, 70, 72,
85, 110, 117, 122, 125, 189n9. See
also Abstraction, lived; Perceptual
judgment
semblance as, 44, 50, 58, 133
Thirdness, 99, 102 – 103
Thought. 34, 80. See also Abstraction,
lived; Perceptual judgment;
Thinking-feeling
amodality and, 110, 122, 162
form-of-life and, 186n3
language and, 117 – 121, 122, 124,
187n6, 187 – 188n7
limit of, 19, 122, 125, 137 – 138, 145,
162
as lived abstraction, 116
as nascent action, 114
nature and, 28
potential and, 50 – 51
proprioception and, 138, 145
pure, 122 – 123, 125
ritual, 124
Time, 8, 24 – 25. See also Duration;
Future, immediate; Past, immediate;
Present (specious)
dance and, 141
as emergent, 88, 89, 90, 94 – 95, 96, 97,
184n3
-image, 17
music and, 145 – 146, 152
taking time, 161, 165, 172
Topological Media Lab (Montreal), 77,
78, 80
Totality, “ smallest, ” 59, 60, 179
Touch (tactility), 42, 44, 55, 57, 64, 70,
71, 74, 75, 88, 95, 96, 97, 111, 113,
125, 127, 142, 185n7
Trace, 13 – 14, 109 – 110, 114, 115, 117,
122, 127, 132, 183n5, 187n7
fore-tracing, 118 – 120, 123, 126, 127,
149, 169, 173
Transduction, 64, 78, 79, 80
Transindividual, 113 – 114
Transition, 4, 29 – 30, 32 – 33, 35, 140 – 141
Transmonadism, 59, 68 – 69, 182n3
Truth
language and, 119 – 120, 173, 187n6
nonsensuous similiarity and, 118, 176
semblance of a truth, 126 – 130,
137 – 138, 166 – 167
semblance of “ the ” truth, 130, 133,
175 – 176, 178, 179
speculative-pragmatist theory of,
29 – 30, 32 – 33, 36, 118 – 119, 120 – 121,
126, 127, 130, 138, 140, 188n8
Typology, generative, 83
Unconscious. See Nonconscious
Unity, dynamic, 3, 4, 8, 17, 19 – 20, 21,
26, 119, 149, 179, 182n3
Universality, 60 – 62, 116, 138, 176, 177
Universe, 28, 34, 58, 140, 182n3,
184n5
of nonlocal linkage, (qualitative-
relational universe), 109 – 110,
115 – 116, 130, 133, 140 – 141, 146,
150, 151, 170, 186n2, 187n4
“ ovum ” of, 90, 92, 95 – 96, 97, 98, 102
vs. world, 108 – 109, 115 – 116, 148
218 Index
Vagueness, 9, 89, 90, 92, 95 – 96, 99,
102, 103, 153
Val é ry, Paul, 131 – 135, 139, 140, 141
Vanishing point, 49, 59 – 61, 63, 65,
68 – 69, 86, 128, 137, 138, 189n9
Virtual. See also Event, virtual and
actual as inseparable from, 16, 18 – 19,
33, 58, 88, 90, 98, 150, 183 – 184n5,
185n4
affect and, 65, 67
color and, 87 – 88
continuity as, 66, 97
Deleuze on, 16, 17, 68, 183 – 184n5
form-of-life and, 131, 169 – 170
James on, 23, 33, 86, 117, 118, 119
as limit-concept of process, 16 – 17
nascent action and, 121, 122
order, 60
paradox of, 18 – 19, 23
perception and, 43, 44, 55, 65, 86,
121 ( see also Semblance)
politics and, 173, 174
potential and, 16, 33, 67 – 68
process and, 16 – 17
pure experience and, 10, 33
as real, 16 – 17
relation and, 36, 43, 64, 84, 86, 185n3
semblance and, 15 – 18, 55, 56
senses and, 18, 71, 76
Simondon on, 185n4
space and, 16, 116, 128, 134
speculative-pragmatism and, 16, 18,
36 – 37
terminus and, 32, 117, 118 – 121
thought and, 16, 33, 67 – 68
vision and, 17 – 18, 41, 43 – 45, 57,
59 – 60, 64, 98, 126, 128, 137,
156 – 157
Whitehead and, 16, 67 – 68,
183 – 184n5
whole, 87, 88, 90, 93, 95
Virtual center, 60 – 61, 63
Virtual domain, 186n2
Virtual event. See Event, virtual and
Virtual idea, 16
Virtual limit, 17, 89 – 90, 122, 151
Virtual line, 88 – 91, 92, 99, 125
Virtual movement, 41, 43, 59 – 60, 61,
114, 170
Virtual powers, 141, 173, 188n7
Virtual whole, 87, 88, 90, 93, 95
Vision
abstraction and, 43 – 44, 97, 133
as action, 43
activation (energizing) of, 70 – 71, 137,
159 – 161, 163, 164
activation contour and, 110, 112
affective tonality of, 143, 160,
161 – 162, 189n14
audiovision, 81 – 82, 143 – 144, 174
chaos of, 95, 97
double, 93 – 94, 97, 161
as dynamic, 40 – 41
-effect, 17, 70, 81, 160
gaps in, 94 – 95, 98 – 99
haptic, 57, 75
hearing and, 18, 143, 145, 156, 157,
167
kinsesthesia and, 42, 44, 55, 71, 74,
75, 76, 77, 79 – 80, 97, 125, 137, 138,
145, 156, 160, 162, 165
limit of, 94
lived-in, 70 – 71
movement and, 17, 41 – 43, 59 – 60, 69,
70 – 71, 77 – 80, 95 – 97, 106 – 109, 114,
127 137, 156, 160, 162, 164 – 165,
185n6
music and, 157
proprioception and, 95, 127, 160, 166
self-relating of, 161 – 162
semblance and, 17 – 18, 23 – 24, 43 – 44,
49 – 51, 55 – 56, 70 – 71, 127, 137, 161,
164
touch (tactility) and, 42, 44, 55, 57,
64, 70, 71, 74, 75, 95, 96, 97, 111,
113, 125, 127, 142
Index 219
virtual and, 17 – 18, 41, 43 – 45, 57,
59 – 60, 64, 98, 126, 128, 137,
156 – 157
vitality affect and, 44, 131, 160, 161
Visionary experience, 125 – 126
Vitalism, 84
Vitality affect, 43 – 44, 112, 115. See also
Aliveness (animation)
art and, 45, 69, 74
dance and, 140, 142
emotion and, 152 – 153
form-of-life and, 111, 112, 131, 132
music and, 145 – 146, 168
technique of existence and, 167 – 168,
173
ubiquity of, 186 – 187n4
vision and, 44, 131, 160, 161
Wark, Mackenzie, 184n1
Weschler, Lawrence, 72, 158, 165
Westphal, Jonathan, 87
Whitehead, A. N., 143
on abstraction, 6, 15, 27 – 28, 43, 100
on activity, 1, 2, 8, 28
actualism and, 183 – 184n3
on affective tonality, 65, 113
on appetition, 151
on bare activity, 181n1
on body, 28
on change, 181 – 182n3
on cognitivism, 6
on conceptual prehension, 186
on conceptual reversion, 182n3
on concrescence, 149 – 150,
189 – 190n16
on contemporary independence, 21,
64, 67 – 69, 183
on creativity, 2
on datum, 183n3, 190n19
Deleuze and, 67 – 68, 183 – 184nn4 – 5
on demonstration, 119
on duration, 9, 182n3
on energizing of experience, 16
on event, 6, 119, 182 – 183n3
on expression, 14
on fallacy of misplaced concreteness,
27, 181n1
on feeling = being, 188 – 189n9,
190n16
on fusion, 150
on immanence/transcendence, 22
on immediate future, 9
on immediate past, 9, 65
on importance, 14
on intensity, 171, 190n16
on interactivity, 67, 190n16
on language, 116, 117
on lure for feeling, 151
and matter and life, 181n1
on monad, 58
on mood, 65
on moreness of the world, 182n2
on nature, 6, 28
on negative prehension, 155,
183 – 184n5
on nexus, 165
on nonhuman perception, 183
on nonsensuous perception, 17, 65
on object, 6, 8, 9, 15, 16, 43, 117
on perception, 25 – 26, 82, 183n3
on perishing, 9, 84
on potential, 1, 16, 28, 58, 67 – 68,
183 – 184n5
pragmatism and, 31
on prehension, 85, 186n1
on pure feeling, 10, 85
on real, 67, 183 – 184n5
on reenaction, 114
on self-enjoyment, 2, 4, 8, 28, 181
on sheer individuality, 20, 182n3
on simple location, 27, 50
on singularity, 150
on skipped intermediaries, 116
on specious present, 9
on speculation, 119
on subject, 8, 159
220 Index
on subjective form, 8, 159, 181n3,
184n5
on superject, 9, 21
on vagueness, 9
virtual and, 16, 67 – 68, 183 – 184n5
on “ withness ” of the sense organs,
143, 189n14
Whole, 25, 149
fragmentary, 58 – 59, 61, 70
semblance of, 132
virtual, 87, 88, 90, 93, 95
World
as additive, 34
expression and, 21, 23, 25
made of experience, 20, 25 – 26, 31, 85,
188 – 189n9, 190n6
as process, 6
as “ self-supporting, ” 32, 34
semblance and, 58 – 59, 60, 125, 130
terminus of, 151
vs. universe, 108 – 109, 115 – 116, 148
Worlding, 110, 115
World-line, 108 – 110, 113, 115 – 117,
119, 123, 126, 139, 140, 144,
146 – 147, 180
invention of, 121, 138, 167, 171
Worringer, Wilhem, 57
Whitehead, A. N. (cont.)